Organizing Supply Chain Processes for Sustainable Innovation in the Agri-Food Industry (Organizing for Sustainable Effectiveness) v.5 (Organizing for Sustainable Effectiveness, 5)

Organizing Supply Chain Processes for Sustainable Innovation in the Agri-Food Industry (Organizing for Sustainable Effectiveness) v.5 (Organizing for Sustainable Effectiveness, 5)

by Christopher Worley (Editor), Christopher Worley (Editor), Raffaella Cagliano (Author), Frederico Caniato (Editor)

Synopsis

The sustainability of agri-food supply chains is particularly relevant for global sustainable development. Many existing food production systems do more harm than good. They compromise the natural rhythms of the Earth, introduce toxins, and therefore sacrifice future capability for current demands - the opposite of sustainable development norms. The existing system is also unbalanced with respect to its capacity to produce, the amount of waste it generates, the number of people who suffer from hunger, and the nutritional value it provides. Most of the current supply chains have been developed within the classic economic paradigm, where scale and leverage drive choices towards more profitable models. As a consequence, finding new ways to produce, distribute and consume food is a morale, financial, and environmental necessity. Sustainable development and triple bottom line perspectives provide the logic for questioning this paradigm. This book presents and discusses nine cases of organizational innovation in food supply chain, covering different phases of food production, facing different challenges, and proposing different solutions to the challenge of sustainable food development.

$210.32

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 352
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Published: 26 Aug 2016

ISBN 10: 1786354888
ISBN 13: 9781786354884

Media Reviews
Business scholars present a series of cases that address sustainability oriented innovation in the agri-food industry, focusing on the agricultural, processing, distribution, and consumption activities associated with its supply chain. Among their topics are the challenge of sustainable innovation in agri-food supply chains, building social capital into the disrupted green coffee supply chain: Illy's journey to quality and sustainability, the evolution of Barilla's durum wheat supply chain contracts for triple bottom line benefits, surplus food redistribution for social purposes: the case of Coop Lombardia, Origin Green: when your brand is your supply chain, and inclusive innovation and the role of partnerships: the case of Semi Di Liberta.--Annotation (c)2018 (protoview.com)
Author Bio
Raffaella Cagliano, Department of Management, Economics and Industrial Engineering, Politecnico Di Milano, Milan, Italy Federico F. A. Caniato, Department of Management, Economics and Industrial Engineering, Politecnico Di Milano, Milan, Italy Christopher G. Worley, Centre for Leadership and Effective Organizations, Neoma Business School, Reims, France