Modern slavery challenges to supply chain management

Purpose – This paper aims to draw attention to the challenges modern slavery poses to supply chain management. Although many international supply chains are (most often unknowingly) connected to slave labour activities, supply chain managers and researchers have so far neglected the issue. This wil...

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Main Authors: Gold, Stefan, Trautrims, Alexander, Trodd, Zoe
Format: Article
Published: Emerald 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32711/
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author Gold, Stefan
Trautrims, Alexander
Trodd, Zoe
author_facet Gold, Stefan
Trautrims, Alexander
Trodd, Zoe
author_sort Gold, Stefan
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Purpose – This paper aims to draw attention to the challenges modern slavery poses to supply chain management. Although many international supply chains are (most often unknowingly) connected to slave labour activities, supply chain managers and researchers have so far neglected the issue. This will most likely change as soon as civil society lobbying and new legislation impose increasing litigation and reputational risks on companies operating international supply chains. Design/methodology/approach – The paper provides a definition of slavery; explores potentials for knowledge exchange with other disciplines; discusses management tools for detecting slavery, as well as suitable company responses after its detection; and outlines avenues for future research. Findings – Due to a lack of effective indicators, new tools and indicator systems need to be developed that consider the specific social, cultural and geographical context of supply regions. After detection of slavery, multi-stakeholder partnerships, community-centred approaches and supplier development appear to be effective responses. Research limitations/implications – New theory development in supply chain management (SCM) is urgently needed to facilitate the understanding, avoidance and elimination of slavery in supply chains. As a starting point for future research, the challenges of slavery to SCM are conceptualised, focussing on capabilities and specific institutional context. Practical implications – The paper provides a starting point for the development of practices and tools for identifying and removing slave labour from supply chains. Originality/value – Although representing a substantial threat to current supply chain models, slavery has so far not been addressed in SCM research.
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spelling nottingham-327112020-05-04T17:09:15Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32711/ Modern slavery challenges to supply chain management Gold, Stefan Trautrims, Alexander Trodd, Zoe Purpose – This paper aims to draw attention to the challenges modern slavery poses to supply chain management. Although many international supply chains are (most often unknowingly) connected to slave labour activities, supply chain managers and researchers have so far neglected the issue. This will most likely change as soon as civil society lobbying and new legislation impose increasing litigation and reputational risks on companies operating international supply chains. Design/methodology/approach – The paper provides a definition of slavery; explores potentials for knowledge exchange with other disciplines; discusses management tools for detecting slavery, as well as suitable company responses after its detection; and outlines avenues for future research. Findings – Due to a lack of effective indicators, new tools and indicator systems need to be developed that consider the specific social, cultural and geographical context of supply regions. After detection of slavery, multi-stakeholder partnerships, community-centred approaches and supplier development appear to be effective responses. Research limitations/implications – New theory development in supply chain management (SCM) is urgently needed to facilitate the understanding, avoidance and elimination of slavery in supply chains. As a starting point for future research, the challenges of slavery to SCM are conceptualised, focussing on capabilities and specific institutional context. Practical implications – The paper provides a starting point for the development of practices and tools for identifying and removing slave labour from supply chains. Originality/value – Although representing a substantial threat to current supply chain models, slavery has so far not been addressed in SCM research. Emerald 2015-07-01 Article PeerReviewed Gold, Stefan, Trautrims, Alexander and Trodd, Zoe (2015) Modern slavery challenges to supply chain management. Supply Chain Management, 20 (5). pp. 485-494. ISSN 1359-8546 Slavery Human rights Labour rights Supply chain auditing Supply chain collaboration Supply chain compliance http://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/full/10.1108/SCM-02-2015-0046 doi:10.1108/SCM-02-2015-0046 doi:10.1108/SCM-02-2015-0046
spellingShingle Slavery
Human rights
Labour rights
Supply chain auditing
Supply chain collaboration
Supply chain compliance
Gold, Stefan
Trautrims, Alexander
Trodd, Zoe
Modern slavery challenges to supply chain management
title Modern slavery challenges to supply chain management
title_full Modern slavery challenges to supply chain management
title_fullStr Modern slavery challenges to supply chain management
title_full_unstemmed Modern slavery challenges to supply chain management
title_short Modern slavery challenges to supply chain management
title_sort modern slavery challenges to supply chain management
topic Slavery
Human rights
Labour rights
Supply chain auditing
Supply chain collaboration
Supply chain compliance
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32711/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32711/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32711/