Abstract

Increasingly, the effects of supply chains on environmental issues have been a focal point in discussions involving stakeholders, authorities, and customers. The aim of this paper is to inspect how innovation and sustainability are integrated into the wider context of the supply chains. To this end, a systematic literature review was carried out with a particular focus on papers published in recent years (2015–2017) so as to continue from a previous review on the sustainable supply chain innovation topic covering the time span of 1996–2014. The descriptive aspects of the published papers are firstly examined, i.e., the year of publication, journal, research methodology, industry field and country of the study, followed by the thematic ones, i.e., key themes of the innovation process, the types of innovation found, their newness, dimensions, and main theories that emerged. The analysis shows an upward trend of literature in numerical terms and a wider spread of sustainable innovations. Additionally, the research highlights further areas of research that are deserving of attention. These areas include analyses of specific industrial sectors which have been less covered in the published literature; research activities in the less developed countries; more attention on the social dimension of sustainability; a more general contribution from some nations that turned out to be less productive or even inactive on the sustainable supply chain innovation topic. Finally, a framework is developed which could constitute the basis for further developments and research on this issue.

Highlights

  • With a growing market demand for various products in the latter half of the 20th century, many organizations ventured into risky but frugally profitable modes of production, compromising long-term impacts both on society and the environment [1]

  • The effects of supply chains on environmental issues have been a focal point in recent discussions [12] and research in the area of sustainable supply chain management (SSCM) has evolved over the past few decades [13]

  • It is clear that the literature discussing innovation and sustainability is gradually growing; this

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Summary

Introduction

With a growing market demand for various products in the latter half of the 20th century, many organizations ventured into risky but frugally profitable modes of production, compromising long-term impacts both on society and the environment [1]. This fact, in addition to the several accidents that have occurred, such as the Chernobyl disaster in 1986 or the famous oil tanker Amoco Cadiz sink in 1978 and many others, led the United Nations to coin the term sustainable development during the Conference on the Human Environment in 1972 [2], which can be inserted in the business context as meeting the needs of firm’s direct and indirect stakeholders without compromising its ability to meet the needs of future stakeholders as well [3]. SSCM is essentially an extension of GSCM (Green Supply Chain Management), i.e., the integration of environmental thinking into supply chain management [14] that comprises economic, environmental, and social concerns [15]

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