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Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary.This timely Research Agenda explores humanitarian logistics as an academic discipline in the wake of major disasters and conflicts worldwide. It establishes new methods of approach and extends the discussion to include recent developments since the COVID-19 pandemic.Focusing on previously underexplored areas, this Research Agenda presents a provocative exploration of supply chains for humanitarian aid, disaster relief, and complex emergencies, as well as necessary structural changes. Expert academics and practitioners in the field provide an overview of trends and developments and grant a comprehensive coverage of humanitarian operations. They evaluate the importance of NGOs and nonprofit international actors, while assessing the connection to commercial logistics in practical management. Chapters look ahead to important avenues of study, particularly the need for robustness of humanitarian aid infrastructures in the face of increased impacts from conflict and unpredictable weather events.Academics and students in humanitarian operations, logistics, supply chain management as well as political science, international relations, and business studies will greatly benefit from this Research Agenda’s invaluable insights. It is also a crucial resource for humanitarian professionals and policymakers.
Edited by Nezih Altay, Vincent de Paul Professor, Department of Management & Entrepreneurship, DePaul University, USA and Gyöngyi Kovács, Erkko Professor of Humanitarian Logistics and Dean of Research, Department of Supply Chain Management & Social Responsibility, Hanken School of Economics, Finland
Contents1 Introduction, trends and developments 1Nezih Altay and Gyöngyi Kovács2 The paradoxes of delivering aid in complex emergencies 11Russell Harpring and Amin Maghsoudi3 Civil-military coordination 37Per Skoglund and Graham Heaslip4 Beneficiary-centric approaches in humanitarian operations 51Telesilla Kotsi and John Lowrey5 Refugee logistics: Camps and beyond 69Feyza Sahinyazan6 The climate crisis and humanitarian logistics 89Minchul Sohn and Saeyeon Roh7 Cash interventions 109Wojciech D. Piotrowicz and Sarah Schiffling8 Digitalisation of the humanitarian sector 129Rameshwar Dubey9 Corporate social responsibility and the role of thecommercial sector in humanitarian logistics 147Ruth Banomyong10 Coordination among humanitarian actors 169Iman Parsa, Bublu Thakur-Weigold and Luk Van Wassenhove11 Localization of aid 185Lina Frennesson and Eric James12 The interface of sustainability and humanitarian operations 205Matthias Klumpp13 Exploring procurement from a humanitarian perspective 217Jihee Kim14 medical aid logistics 239Gyöngyi Kovács and Abdelsalam Adam Hamid15 Setting a research agenda for humanitarian logistics 251Gyöngyi Kovács, Nezih Altay and Luk Van Wassenhove