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Circular Economy Supply Chains From Chains To Systems Lydia Bals

  • SKU: BELL-43397264
Circular Economy Supply Chains From Chains To Systems Lydia Bals
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Circular Economy Supply Chains From Chains To Systems Lydia Bals instant download after payment.

Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
File Extension: PDF
File size: 7.59 MB
Pages: 464
Author: Lydia Bals, Wendy L. Tate, Lisa M. Ellram, (eds.)
ISBN: 9781839825453, 1839825456
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Circular Economy Supply Chains From Chains To Systems Lydia Bals by Lydia Bals, Wendy L. Tate, Lisa M. Ellram, (eds.) 9781839825453, 1839825456 instant download after payment.

A circular economy perspective embraces a systemic, cradle-to-cradle notion that everything is designed to be reused as long as possible and then recaptured and repurposed when reuse is no longer possible. Designing for
a circular economy ecosystem requires a holistic, integrative viewpoint, spanning all aspects of design and development and considering many supply chain actors, far beyond that of traditional supply chains. This edited
book adopts a biomimetic lens, highlighting the need for cross-industry flows and need for different actors (beyond producers and consumers) in circular value cycles. Enablers such as incentives and/or legislation are also discussed. While biomimicry provides the structure for organizing this book, individual chapters build on other theoretical lenses and concepts, such as stakeholder theory, etc. The intent is to move beyond a dyadic
(buyer–supplier) view, embracing a holistic network or ecosystem view, to consider a cross-industry system perspective, where there is a diversity of actors (covering four actor groups: producers, consumers, scavengers, and decomposers) needed for a working ecosystem. This edited book offers a comprehensive overview of system components and actors, including how the circular economy adds value, the role of producers and consumers, the spectrum of recovery possibilities to return products back to the consumption supply chain, and the essential role of information management.

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