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Institutional pressures and sustainability assessment in supply chains

Katri Kauppi (Department of Information and Service Economy, Aalto University School of Business, Helsinki, Finland)
Claire Hannibal (University of Wolverhampton Business School, Wolverhampton, UK)

Supply Chain Management

ISSN: 1359-8546

Article publication date: 17 October 2017

Issue publication date: 31 October 2017

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Abstract

Purpose

Firms are increasingly held accountable for the welfare of workers across entire supply chains and so it is surprising that standard forms of governance for socially sustainable supply chain management have not yet emerged. Assessment initiatives have begun to develop as a proxy measure of social sustainable supply chain management. This research aims to examine how social sustainability assessment initiatives instigate and use institutional pressures to drive third-party accreditation as the legitimate means of demonstrating social sustainability in a global supply chain.

Design/methodology/approach

Ten assessment initiatives focused on assuring social sustainability across supply chains are examined. Data are collected through interviews with senior managers and publicly available secondary material.

Findings

The findings show how the social sustainability assessment initiatives act by instigating institutional pressures indirectly rather than directly. Coercive pressures are the most prevalent and are exerted through consumer and compliance requirements. The notion of pressures operating as a chain is proposed, and the recognition that actors within and outside of a supply chain are crucial to the institutionalization of social sustainability is discussed.

Originality/value

Studies on sustainable supply chain management often focus on how companies sense and act upon institutional pressures. To add to the extant body of knowledge, this study focuses on the sources of the pressures and demonstrates how assessment initiatives use coercive, normative and mimetic pressures to drive the adoption of social sustainability assessment in supply chains.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge the research funding for the project provided by the Finnish Foundation for Economic Education (www.lsr.fi/en/).

Citation

Kauppi, K. and Hannibal, C. (2017), "Institutional pressures and sustainability assessment in supply chains", Supply Chain Management, Vol. 22 No. 5, pp. 458-472. https://doi.org/10.1108/SCM-01-2017-0004

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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