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Article

Green supply chain practices and environmental performance in Brazil: Survey, case studies, and implications for B2B

Details

Citation

Jabbour A, Vazquez-Brust D, Jabbour CJC & Latan H (2017) Green supply chain practices and environmental performance in Brazil: Survey, case studies, and implications for B2B. Industrial Marketing Management, 66, pp. 13-28. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.indmarman.2017.05.003

Abstract
This article examines whether or not customers cooperate in organisations' environmental performance, in what circumstances it happens; and how customers can collaborate with organisations in order to they improve their environmental performance. This research uses both the Ecological Modernisation (EM) and the Resource Dependence Theory (RDT) to analyse the effects of external Green Supply Chain Management (GSCM) practices, namely, ‘Cooperation with Customers’ (CC) and ‘Green Purchasing’ (GP) on the Environmental Performance (EP) of organisations. A multi-method research is used, combining a survey and multiple-case studies of Brazilian organisations. The main results and contributions of this research include: (a) the Brazilian setting, in the context of EM, provides incentives for adopting GSCM practices, especially CC practices; (b) Brazilian organisations depend more on customers than on suppliers to improve EP; and (c) an original matrix for a better understanding of the roles of suppliers and customers to achieve a better EP through a GSCM approach is proposed. This paper provides an extension to EM and RDT theories applied to green operations management by showing that external GSCM can improve EP and such process depends more on CC than GP. Implications for B2B are highlighted.

Keywords
Green supply chain management; Cooperation with customers; Resource Dependence Theory; Ecological modernisation; Sustainability; Brazil

Journal
Industrial Marketing Management: Volume 66

StatusPublished
Publication date31/10/2017
Publication date online24/07/2017
Date accepted by journal24/05/2017
PublisherElsevier
ISSN0019-8501