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Procurement

About: Procurement is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 25669 publications have been published within this topic receiving 334145 citations.


Papers
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01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: The Foodlinks project as mentioned in this paper uses knowledge networks to promote sustainable food and develop and experiment with new ways of linking research to policy-making in the field of sustainable food consumption and production.
Abstract: The Foodlinks project: using knowledge networks to promote sustainable food - The Foodlinks project aims at developing and experimenting with new ways of linking research to policy-making in the field of sustainable food consumption and production. - Three Communities of Practice (CoP) are established: Short food Supply Chains, Revaluing Public Food Procurement and Urban Food Strategies. - Researchers, policy makers and civil society actors sharing a common interest, a practice, a concern or a passion together build up learning communities that expand and evolve over time.

76 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors deal with procurement routes in public building and construction projects in Norway and find out if public owners select a procurement route according to recommended practice, and they call for innovation and better supported selection of the procurement route in public buildings and construction.
Abstract: This paper deals with procurement routes in public building and construction projects in Norway. Seen from a practical point of view, as well as from a theoretical one, it is important to improve methods for selection of procurement procedure, contract model, and compensation formats. The paper objective is to find out if public owners select a procurement route according to recommended practice. The sources are literature, support material for two software tools for selection of the procurement route, and documentation from 22 public building and construction projects in Norway. According to the literature and the support material for the two software tools, the answer to what is the proper procurement route will depend on the characteristics of each project. The documentation study implies that public owners continue to select the same procurement route as they are in the habit of. They do not consider what procurement route suits each single project, and therefore they do not select the route according to recommended practice. The paper calls for innovation and better supported selection of the procurement route in public building and construction projects.

76 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that acceptance of the Amendment will provide a 'net benefit' for countries seeking to improve access to medicines, and emphasize the importance of pursuing concrete transfer of technology measures in support of developing country pharmaceutical manufacturing.
Abstract: The entry into force of the World Trade Organization (WTO) TRIPS Agreement in 1995 transformed the international intellectual property system. The harmonization of basic intellectual property standards has operated to protect investment in innovation, limiting risks from unjustified 'free riding'. Yet these same harmonized IP standards sharply curtailed the traditional capacity of suppliers of public goods, such as health care and nutrition, to address priority needs of less affluent members of society, particularly in (but not limited to) developing countries. In the Doha Declaration, the Waiver Decision of 30 August 2003 and the Article 31bis Protocol of Amendment, stakeholders concerned with re-opening policy space for the supply of newer pharmaceutical products pushed back against restrictive elements of the TRIPS Agreement.Governments around the world are in the process of deciding whether to ratify and accept the Article 31bis Amendment. Based on their Study for the International Trade Committee of the European Parliament, the authors argue that acceptance of the Amendment will provide a 'net benefit' for countries seeking to improve access to medicines. At the insistence of WTO delegations acting on behalf of the originator pharmaceutical industry lobby, Article 31bis regrettably is saddled with unnecessary administrative hurdles. Nonetheless, through skillful lawyering, political determination and coordinated planning, the system can be made to work. Among other options, expeditious back-to-back compulsory licensing linked with pooled procurement strategies may effectively achieve economies of scale in production and distribution of medicines.The authors doubt that the international political environment would support renegotiation of an 'improved' solution. They express concern that failure to bring the Amendment into force will open the door to a campaign to undermine the Waiver Decision. Recent events in Brazil and Thailand illustrate both the opportunities and risks associated with implementing TRIPS exception mechanisms, and help to inform views on the negotiating environment. Specific proposals for regional cooperation in implementing the Amendment are laid out, and the authors emphasize the importance of pursuing concrete transfer of technology measures in support of developing country pharmaceutical manufacturing. Over-reliance on private market mechanisms for the supply of public health goods leaves the international community with an unresolved collective action problem on a large scale. Oxford University Press 2007, all rights reserved, Oxford University Press.

76 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship between discretion, reputation, competition and entry in procurement markets is explored and the benefits of allowing buyers to use reputational indicators based on past performance are discussed.

76 citations

Posted Content
01 Jan 2011
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the underlying concepts of PPPs and the pertinent issues that have arisen during the procurement of infrastructure projects and suggest that future research should focus on examining how PPP delivery can be improved rather than on determining their usage within the marketplace.
Abstract: The public–private partnership (PPP) market in Australia is considered to be sophisticated and mature. Yet there have been several major failures that have occurred with economic infrastructure projects. Building on the experiences of Australia, we examine the underlying concepts of PPPs and the pertinent issues that have arisen during the procurement of infrastructure projects. Lessons learnt from implementing PPPs with respect to risk allocation, certainty, incentives, intergenerational equity and fiscal sustainability, and the cost of capital are identified and discussed. We conclude by suggesting that future research should focus on examining how PPP delivery can be improved rather than on determining their usage within the marketplace.

75 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20231,696
20223,449
20211,142
20201,363
20191,503
20181,423