2009
Managing Supply Chain Risk and VulnerabilityTools and Methods for Supply Chain Decision MakersEditors:
- Teresa Wu,
- Jennifer Blackhurst
- …show all 2hide
ISBN: 978-1-84882-633-5 (Print) 978-1-84882-634-2 (Online)
About this book
- Presents topics on the assessment, modelling and monitoring of supply chain risk
Because a supply chain disruption can be potentially so harmful and costly, there has been a recent surge in interest – from academics and practitioners alike – in supply chain disruptions and related issues. Leading academic researchers, as well as practitioners, have contributed chapters focusing on developing an overall understanding of risk and its relationship to supply chain performance; investigating the relationship between response time and disruption impact; assessing and prioritizing risks; and assessing supply chain resilience, as well as providing tools and methods for assisting with decision making and risk mitigation in the supply chain.
Supply chain managers will find Managing Supply Chain Risk and Vulnerability a useful tool box for methods they can employ to better mitigate and manage supply chain risk. On the academic side, the book can be used to teach senior undergraduate engineering, supply chain, and operations students focusing on current supply chain topics, as well as graduate-level engineering and MBA students. Additionally, researchers may use the text as a reference in the area of supply chain risk and vulnerability.
Teresa Wu is an associate professor at Arizona State University, USA. Her research interests are Supply Chain Management (Supplier Evaluation); Collaborative Product Development; Distributed Decision Making; and Distributed Information System Development. She has industrial experience from three years spent with the Beijing Aviation Simulator Co. as a software engineer and system administrator. Teresa Wu was given the Nationa Science Foundation CAREER award (2003-2008).
Jennifer Blackhurst, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor of Logistics and Supply Chain Management in the College of Business at Iowa State University. She received her doctorate in Industrial Engineering from the University of Iowa in 2002. Her research interests include: Supply Chain Risk and Disruption; Supply Chain Coordination; and Supplier Assessment and Selection. Her publications have appeared or been accepted in such journals as Journal of Operations Management, Production and Operations Management, International Journal of Production Research, and IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management. She is a member of POMS and DSI.