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      Toward supply chain viability theory: from lessons learned through COVID-19 pandemic to viable ecosystems

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          Predicting the impacts of epidemic outbreaks on global supply chains: A simulation-based analysis on the coronavirus outbreak (COVID-19/SARS-CoV-2) case

          Highlights • Epidemic outbreaks are a special case of supply chain (SC) risks. • We articulate the specific features of epidemic outbreaks in SCs. • We demonstrate a simulation model for epidemic outbreak analysis. • We use an example of coronavirus COVID-19 outbreak.
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            Viability of intertwined supply networks: extending the supply chain resilience angles towards survivability. A position paper motivated by COVID-19 outbreak

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              Viable supply chain model: integrating agility, resilience and sustainability perspectives—lessons from and thinking beyond the COVID-19 pandemic

              Viability is the ability of a supply chain (SC) to maintain itself and survive in a changing environment through a redesign of structures and replanning of performance with long-term impacts. In this paper, we theorize a new notion—the viable supply chain (VSC). In our approach, viability is considered as an underlying SC property spanning three perspectives, i.e., agility, resilience, and sustainability. The principal ideas of the VSC model are adaptable structural SC designs for supply–demand allocations and, most importantly, establishment and control of adaptive mechanisms for transitions between the structural designs. Further, we demonstrate how the VSC components can be categorized across organizational, informational, process-functional, technological, and financial structures. Moreover, our study offers a VSC framework within an SC ecosystem. We discuss the relations between resilience and viability. Through the lens and guidance of dynamic systems theory, we illustrate the VSC model at the technical level. The VSC model can be of value for decision-makers to design SCs that can react adaptively to both positive changes (i.e., the agility angle) and be able to absorb negative disturbances, recover and survive during short-term disruptions and long-term, global shocks with societal and economical transformations (i.e., the resilience and sustainability angles). The VSC model can help firms in guiding their decisions on recovery and re-building of their SCs after global, long-term crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic. We emphasize that resilience is the central perspective in the VSC guaranteeing viability of the SCs of the future. Emerging directions in VSC research are discussed.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                International Journal of Production Research
                International Journal of Production Research
                Informa UK Limited
                0020-7543
                1366-588X
                April 18 2023
                March 14 2023
                April 18 2023
                : 61
                : 8
                : 2402-2415
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Berlin School of Economics and Law, Supply Chain and Operations Management, Berlin, Germany
                [2 ]IMT Atlantique, LS2N – CNRS, Nantes, France
                [3 ]Tippie College of Business, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA
                [4 ]Centre for Supply Chain Research, University of Liverpool Management School, Liverpool, UK
                Article
                10.1080/00207543.2023.2177049
                0ead6858-edeb-4f42-9a3c-87507b0cc025
                © 2023
                History

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