Abstract

PurposeThis paper presents an investigation into the ways the term “practice” is commonly referenced in supply chain management academic papers. Scholars have not yet developed a common understanding of the meaning and do not use practice theories when examining practices related to sustainability management in supply chains. Hence, the authors highlight theoretical gaps and make recommendations for future research.Design/methodology/approachGrounded in a systematic literature review of 232 peer-reviewed papers published in operations and supply chain management journals, a qualitative content analysis was conducted using both a deductive and an inductive approach.FindingsResults show that supply chain sustainability (SCS) scholars seem barely interested in increasing the understanding of the term “practice,” widely used in the literature to refer to a practical context. Moreover, a clear distinction between being practical and using practice theories to study SCS practices is needed. A descriptive and critical analysis revealed eight key supply chain practices connected to sustainability, with a clear reflection on their meaning. As awareness of practice theories for research on SCS is limited, few recommendations for researchers and practitioners were identified.Originality/valueUnlike prior literature reviews, the authors reinforce the need to increase the maturity of the SCS field by going beyond superficial theoretical building. Practice theories pathways are provided to enlighten scholars on how to avoid using the term “practice” as taken-for-granted and on how to deal with SCS research and practice.

Highlights

  • Chain sustainability (SCS) is a research field that over time has been associated with a high number of definitions (e.g. Dubey et al, 2017) and frameworks (Ansari and Kant, 2017)

  • We developed a systematic literature review (Tranfield et al, 2003) of 232 articles published in top academic journals in the operations and supply chain management (SCM) field

  • The practice-based view (PBV) allows the use of quantitative methods

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Summary

Introduction

Chain sustainability (SCS) is a research field that over time has been associated with a high number of definitions (e.g. Dubey et al, 2017) and frameworks (Ansari and Kant, 2017). Chain sustainability (SCS) is a research field that over time has been associated with a high number of definitions The theory-building process in the field has not kept pace with the evolution implied by these numbers (cf Touboulic and Walker, 2015). To address this issue, scholars and practitioners need to begin using the same, or at least similar, terminology, which depends on a set of interests, understandings and deliveries from many sources. Published in Modern Supply Chain Research and Applications. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http:// creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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