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Evaluating sustainability in the UK fast food supply chain : Review of dimensions, awareness and practice

Alireza Shokri (Newcastle Business School, Northumbria University, Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK)
David Oglethorpe (Management School, Sheffield University, Sheffield, UK)
Farhad Nabhani (School of Science and Engineering, Teesside University, Middlesbrough, UK)

Journal of Manufacturing Technology Management

ISSN: 1741-038X

Article publication date: 30 September 2014

7917

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to investigate the level of concern and practice of sustainability development and also policy failure in the fast food supply chain.

Design/methodology/approach

A questionnaire using Likert scoring recorded variations in current practice and attitudes toward sustainable business. A two-stage cluster analysis was conducted to analyze the multi-attribute ordinal data obtained from the questionnaire.

Findings

Significant differences were found among clusters of fast food businesses in terms of their sustainability concern and practice, which is of interest to policy makers, consumers and supply chain partners. Medium-sized fast food dealers emerge with high environmental and social concern, but poor practice; larger retailers and fast food chains appear to have both fair social and environmental awareness and practice; and there is a cluster of small takeaway-specific outlets that have particularly low levels of knowledge of sustainability or sustainable practices. Policy failure is prevalent amongst these businesses and without regulation this represents a possible threat to the sector.

Research limitations/implications

Reliance on stated rather than revealed preferences of the study may limit the implications of this analysis but it is a major step forward in understanding what has in the past been a very difficult sector to investigate due to data paucity.

Practical implications

Fast food is a sector with a lack of transparency which has attracted little academic attention to date, due to the difficulties of empirical analysis rather than lack of interest in a key food consumption sector. The message for the sector is to monitor its act, across all business types or face regulatory and policy intervention.

Originality/value

The research conducts a three-dimensional sustainability analysis of fast food supply chains to investigate the differences and trade-offs between different sustainability dimensions.

Keywords

Citation

Shokri, A., Oglethorpe, D. and Nabhani, F. (2014), "Evaluating sustainability in the UK fast food supply chain : Review of dimensions, awareness and practice", Journal of Manufacturing Technology Management, Vol. 25 No. 8, pp. 1224-1244. https://doi.org/10.1108/JMTM-04-2013-0031

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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