Effectiveness-equity tradeoffs in enforcing exclusionary supply chain policies: Lessons from the Amazonian cattle sector
Autor: | Federico Cammelli, Samuel A. Levy, Janina Grabs, Judson Ferreira Valentim, Rachael D. Garrett |
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Přispěvatelé: | FEDERICO CAMMELLI, Environmental Policy Lab, ETH Zürich, Switzerland, SAMUEL A. LEVY, Environmental Policy Lab, ETH Zürich, Switzerland, JANINA GRABS, Environmental Policy Lab, ETH Zürich, Switzerland / Universitat Ramon Llull, ESADE Business School, Spain, JUDSON FERREIRA VALENTIM, CPAF-AC, RACHAEL D. GARRETT, Environmental Policy Lab, ETH Zürich, Switzerlan. |
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Cadena de suministro
Livestock 010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences Public policy Strategy and Management Ganado Sistemas de control medioambiental Cadeia Produtiva 01 natural sciences Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering Políticas Públicas Environmental control systems Amazonia 0502 economics and business Deforestation 0105 earth and related environmental sciences General Environmental Science 2. Zero hunger Renewable Energy Sustainability and the Environment 05 social sciences 1. No poverty 15. Life on land Supply chain Voluntary sustainability standards Multi-tier supply chains Enforcement Commodities Market access Pecuária Deforestación 050203 business & management Controle Ambiental Desmatamento |
Zdroj: | Repositório Institucional da EMBRAPA (Repository Open Access to Scientific Information from EMBRAPA-Alice) Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária (Embrapa) instacron:EMBRAPA Journal of Cleaner Production, 332 |
Popis: | To address ongoing deforestation for global food commodities production, companies and governments have adopted a range of forest-focused supply chain policies. In the Brazilian Amazon, these policies take the form of market exclusion mechanisms, i.e., immediately dropping suppliers who have cleared their land after a specific cut-off date. Theory suggests that strict exclusionary policies such as these are likely to result in both negative livelihood effects and reduced effectiveness of the policy if some farmers are not able to comply. It is proposed that a more cooperative model of enforcement that uses flexible and negotiated approaches to compliance management may enable more marginal and disadvantaged farmers to achieve compliance, thereby improving both the effectiveness of supply chain policies and their equity. Through our case study of cattle in the Brazilian Amazon, we examine the degree to which a purportedly cooperative supply chain policy exhibits coercive tendencies at different tiers and the degree to which these tendencies influence effectiveness and equity outcomes of the policy. We show that, surprisingly, even cooperative models of enforcement are prone to exhibit coercive tendencies in multi-tier supply chains, leading to severe equity shortcomings. We provide recommendations and a research agenda to mitigate effectiveness-equity tradeoffs in multi-tier, forest-focused supply chain policies in the aim to improve the design, adoption, and implementation of such policies. Made available in DSpace on 2021-12-22T13:01:09Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 27249.pdf: 2125497 bytes, checksum: 2bcc03300e0d6290c46c9eceeb3ef81b (MD5) Previous issue date: 2022 |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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