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Supply chains – a study of collaborations for eco-labeling

Nilsson, Maria and Malveholm, Marcus (2009)
Department of Business Administration
Abstract
Some companies have chosen to differentiate their products by labeling them environmentally friendly, or “green”. Green products sends the message to the market that a particular company is caring for the environment, however the processes involved in making the product can be the reasons for a product being labeled green. The production processes of the final stage company in a supply chain may not be the reason for a green label, but rather its suppliers’ processes. As such, by looking into the integration, collaboration and development in supply chains of green labeled products, one can identify where in the production processes the products or components gain the green label. This research focuses on the collaboration aspects of... (More)
Some companies have chosen to differentiate their products by labeling them environmentally friendly, or “green”. Green products sends the message to the market that a particular company is caring for the environment, however the processes involved in making the product can be the reasons for a product being labeled green. The production processes of the final stage company in a supply chain may not be the reason for a green label, but rather its suppliers’ processes. As such, by looking into the integration, collaboration and development in supply chains of green labeled products, one can identify where in the production processes the products or components gain the green label. This research focuses on the collaboration aspects of eco-labeling in the hotel and restaurant industry. The problem formulation and research questions are built on a pilot study, as is the theoretical framework. Using the theories and mindsets of established researchers such as Håkansson, Snehota, Ford, Hines, Usherwood and Lammings, the researchers investigates the eco-labeling processes of the hotels- and restaurant industry in the south of Sweden. (Less)
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author
Nilsson, Maria and Malveholm, Marcus
supervisor
organization
year
type
H1 - Master's Degree (One Year)
subject
keywords
Supply-chain management, collaboration, environmental friendly, competitive advantage and value streaming., Management of enterprises, Företagsledning, management
language
Swedish
id
1437780
date added to LUP
2009-06-05 00:00:00
date last changed
2012-04-02 17:28:15
@misc{1437780,
  abstract     = {{Some companies have chosen to differentiate their products by labeling them environmentally friendly, or “green”. Green products sends the message to the market that a particular company is caring for the environment, however the processes involved in making the product can be the reasons for a product being labeled green. The production processes of the final stage company in a supply chain may not be the reason for a green label, but rather its suppliers’ processes. As such, by looking into the integration, collaboration and development in supply chains of green labeled products, one can identify where in the production processes the products or components gain the green label. This research focuses on the collaboration aspects of eco-labeling in the hotel and restaurant industry. The problem formulation and research questions are built on a pilot study, as is the theoretical framework. Using the theories and mindsets of established researchers such as Håkansson, Snehota, Ford, Hines, Usherwood and Lammings, the researchers investigates the eco-labeling processes of the hotels- and restaurant industry in the south of Sweden.}},
  author       = {{Nilsson, Maria and Malveholm, Marcus}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Supply chains – a study of collaborations for eco-labeling}},
  year         = {{2009}},
}