Inspired by the conference theme of “Broadening our Sight”, this presenter symposium illustrates how supply chain management (SCM) research could make more numerous and impactful contributions to addressing major organizational, societal, and professional challenges if its use of qualitative research methods was complemented with discourse analysis. The symposium also responds to recent calls for ‘in-house’ theory development within the discipline of SCM and diversification towards broader research methods, including those that involve qualitative and critical forms of data collection and analysis. Using examples that are familiar to SCM researchers – the discourses of sustainability and modern slavery – we illustrate how discourse analysis can help to theorize SCM phenomena by problematizing established meanings and revealing how they reproduce power relations among actors. We show how insights from discourse analysis can complement existing theories of the supply chain and, in so doing, potentially rejuvenate the field of SCM by inspiring novel theory development, opening up different empirical settings, and promoting new ways of analyzing qualitative data. Overview of Discourse Analysis - An Organization and Management Studies Perspective Presenter: Cynthia Hardy; U. of Melbourne Discourse Analysis and Sustainable Supply Chain Management Presenter: Steve Maguire; U. of Sydney Business School Application of Discourse Analysis to Modern Slavery in Supply Chains Presenter: Vikram Bhakoo; U. of Melbourne