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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10227/230

Title: Corporate Environmental Responsibility in Demand Networks (summary section only)
Authors: Kovács, Gyöngyi
Subject: Supply Chain Management and Corporate Geography
Keywords: collaboration
supply chain management
demand network
corporate environmental responsibility
stakeholder salience
industrial ecology
Abstract: Research on corporate responsibility has traditionally focused on the responsibilities of companies within their corporate boundaries only. Yet this view is challenged today as more and more companies face the situation in which the environmental and social performance of their suppliers, distributors, industry or other associated partners impacts on their sales performance and brand equity. Simultaneously, policy-makers have taken up the discussion on corporate responsibility from the perspective of globalisation, in particular of global supply chains. The category of selecting and evaluating suppliers has also entered the field of environmental reporting. Companies thus need to tackle their responsibility in collaboration with different partners. The aim of the thesis is to further the understanding of collaboration and corporate environmental responsibility beyond corporate boundaries. Drawing on the fields of supply chain management and industrial ecology, the thesis sets out to investigate inter-firm collaboration on three different levels, between the company and its stakeholders, in the supply chain, and in the demand network of a company. The thesis is comprised of four papers: Paper A discusses the use of different research approaches in logistics and supply chain management. Paper B introduces the study on collaboration and corporate environmental responsibility from a focal company perspective, looking at the collaboration of companies with their stakeholders, and the salience of these stakeholders. Paper C widens this perspective to an analysis on the supply chain level. The focus here is not only beyond corporate boundaries, but also beyond direct supplier and customer interfaces in the supply chain. Paper D then extends the analysis to the demand network level, taking into account the input-output, competitive and regulatory environments, in which a company operates. The results of the study broaden the view of corporate responsibility. By applying this broader view, different types of inter-firm collaboration can be highlighted. Results also show how environmental demand is extended in the supply chain regardless of the industry background of the company.
Date of defence: 18-Dec-2006
Issue Date: 8-Dec-2006
Publisher: Swedish School of Economics and Business Administration
Svenska handelshögskolan
Series/Report no.: Economics and Society
166
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10227/230
URN:ISBN:951-555-938-3
ISBN: 951-555-938-3
ISSN: 0424-7256
Appears in Collections:Economics and Society (Doctoral theses)
SCM and Corporate Geography - Doctoral theses

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