Green supply chain management: analysis of brazilian academic publications

This paper deals with environmental issues from the perspective of Supply Chain Management. With the incorporation of environmental concerns in a systematic manner the concept of Green Supply Chain Management (GSCM) has emerged. The subject GSCM interests not only to academics but also to profession...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: José Carlos Barbieri, José Milton de Sousa Filho, Cristiane N. Brandão, Luiz Carlos Di Serio, Edgar Reyes Junior
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina 2014-08-01
Series:Revista Produção Online
Subjects:
Online Access:http://producaoonline.org.br/rpo/article/view/1674
Description
Summary:This paper deals with environmental issues from the perspective of Supply Chain Management. With the incorporation of environmental concerns in a systematic manner the concept of Green Supply Chain Management (GSCM) has emerged. The subject GSCM interests not only to academics but also to professional audience especially with regard to new legal obligations, and social pressures of various types of stakeholders, as well as issues related to the competitiveness of enterprises and their supply chains. However, the way in which this knowledge is being produced in Brazil is not clear, hence the need for a mapping which areas and sub-areas of GSCM has been studied most frequently. Thus, this work can be characterized as a desk research that aims to analyze the Brazilian academic publications on green supply chain management. In order to delimit the scope of the research, we collected articles published from 2006 to 2010 in specific Brazilian congresses of Management and Production Engineering, as EnANPAD, SIMPOI and SIMPEP. 110 papers were collected and analyzed.The area of Green Operations represents 81% of published articles and 45% of these focus on Reverse Logistics. 70% of total papers are empirical and 77% use a qualitative approach, while 57% of the total are case studies
ISSN:1676-1901