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Showing 4 results for Sustainable Supply Chain

Zahwa Fitria Gumilang, Rakhmat Ceha, Vera Septiawati,
Volume 0, Issue 0 (10-2025)
Abstract

The imperative to align supply chains with sustainability objectives has intensified interest in the technological dimensions of sustainable supply chain management (SSCM). To provide a systematic overview of how this research area has evolved, this study conducts a bibliometric analysis of publications from 2005 to 2025, drawing on data from Scopus and Web of Science (WoS). The results demonstrate that technologies such as blockchain, artificial intelligence, big data analytics, and the Internet of Things have received the most attention, shaping the trajectory of SSCM research. Publication and citation trends show exponential growth after 2016, reflecting both global policy shifts and accelerated digital adoption during the COVID-19 pandemic. The United Kingdom and China lead in research output, while the United States demonstrates high citation impact. Several highly cited publications serve as intellectual anchors, shaping theoretical and methodological development. Keyword analysis and bibliographic coupling further reveal five dominant knowledge clusters: digital transformation for SSCM, life cycle thinking, policy in SSCM, blockchain for food sustainability, and sustainable product design. Overall, the study highlights technological trajectories, underexplored research areas, and regional disparities, providing theoretical and practical guidance for future interdisciplinary research, policy design, and technology adoption aimed at advancing sustainable and resilient supply chains.

Ali Borumand, Morteza Rasti-Barzoki,
Volume 30, Issue 3 (9-2019)
Abstract

In this paper, greening, pricing, and advertising policies in a supply chain will be examined with government intervention. The supply chain has two members. First, a manufacturer seeking to determine the wholesale price and the greening level and second, a retailer that has to determine the advertising cost and the retail price. The government is trying to encourage the manufacturer to green the production using subsidies. Using the game theory, at first, the demand function and the profit functions of both members are introduced, then in a dynamic game, their Stackelberg equilibrium is calculated. Sensitivity and parameter analysis are made to more illustration of the problem. We found the supply chain profit function behavior and results show that if the sensitivity of demand-price is less than a specific value, the manufacturer will not participate in greening policies.

 
Roza Babagolzadeh, Javad Rezaeian, Mohammad Valipour Khatir,
Volume 31, Issue 2 (6-2020)
Abstract

Sustainable supply chain networks have attracted considerable attention in recent years as a means of dealing with a broad range of environmental and social issues. This paper reports a multi-objective mixed-integer linear programming (MILP) model for use in the design of a sustainable closed loop supply chain network under uncertain conditions. The proposed model aims to minimize total cost, optimize environmental impacts of establishment of facilities, processing and transportation between each level as well as social impacts including customer satisfaction. Due to changes in business environment the uncertainty existed in the research problem, in this paper the chance constrained fuzzy programming approach applied to cope with uncertainties in parameter of the proposed model. Then the proposed multi-objective model solves as single-objective model using LP-metric method.
Mojtaba Nowrouzifasih, Anwar Mahmoodi, Reza Maihami,
Volume 36, Issue 3 (9-2025)
Abstract

The demand for green products has increased in the past few years due to the heightened awareness of environmental issues and the increasing use of green products by consumers. Thus, choosing the best strategy for green product manufacturers is essential. At the same time, producers and retailers are likely to have their decisions influenced by government actions. In this study, we attempt to determine the product's price and greenness within two competitive supply chains. The study investigates the pricing of two substitutable and green products in which each supply chain produces a green product. Using Nash and Stackelberg Game models, we determine how supply chains and their members interact. A Nash model involves two competing supply chains with equal power, within each supply chain, however, there is a Stackelberg competition between the retailer and the manufacturer. The Stackelberg model assumes that one of the supply chains is the market leader. The results show that with increasing government intervention (government's adjustment factor and green level floor for subsidies), regardless of Nash or Stackelberg structures, the green level of the product will increase, and wholesale and retail prices will decrease. Additionally, the price changes in the retailer-Stackelberg structure are greater than those in the manufacturer-Stackelberg structure. Also, by bearing the greenness cost by the manufacturer or retailer, companies can positively impact their profits as well as the level of greenness in their products. When the manufacturer makes an investment in greenness, the retailer and consumer benefit from it, and ultimately become the main force behind the development of green products.
 


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