Abstract

This research contributes to supply chain risk management literature by investigating how leveraging the need for collective prosperity between supply chain partners can enable partners to work together to mitigate supply chain disruption during the Covid-19 pandemic. Drawing from social capital theory, we argue that collective prosperity is a relational behaviour that can be leveraged to reduce opportunistic behaviours, thereby promoting genuine concern for the survival and performance of supply chain partners. Using a qualitative strategy, the study collects data from 20 supply chain managers through semi-structured interviews. The study findings reveal that collective prosperity was an important factor which supply chain partners used - as a basis to go an extra mile in ensuring that their partner's supply chain was not disrupted. Supply chain partners deployed practical tactics to ensure that their partner's firms did not suffer major disruption. The findings underscore the critical role of relational capital in supply chain relationships, specifically leveraging collective prosperity to mitigate supply chain disruptions.

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Cite as

Ali, I. & Whitfield, R. 2022, 'Leveraging on collective prosperity for supply chain disruption during Covid-19 lockdown: experience from Nigeria', 29th International EurOMA Conference, Berlin, 01/07/2022 - 06/07/2022. https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/80816/

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Last updated: 16 June 2022
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