Sustaining company performance during the war-induced crisis using sourcing capability and substitute input

Building on the foundations of Resource-based view theory, Resource dependence theory, and dynamic capabilities theory, we derived theoretical support for the proposition that companies can sustain their operational activities and organizational economic performance during conflict and political ins...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environment, development and sustainability development and sustainability, 2024-12, Vol.26 (12), p.30001-30026
Hauptverfasser: Obrenovic, Bojan, Godinic, Danijela, Njavro, Mato
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container_title Environment, development and sustainability
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creator Obrenovic, Bojan
Godinic, Danijela
Njavro, Mato
description Building on the foundations of Resource-based view theory, Resource dependence theory, and dynamic capabilities theory, we derived theoretical support for the proposition that companies can sustain their operational activities and organizational economic performance during conflict and political instability. The study presents a conceptual model designed to reduce offshore dependence and maintain operational organizational capabilities. The study applies a systematic literature review approach to synthesize existing theories and research on the topic of crisis management and its impact on organizational sustainability during a war-induced crisis. A literature review encompassed identification of the themes that was followed by conceptualizing the model, and development of the propositions. The search terms included “organizational operational performance,” “sustained economic performance,” “economic crisis,” “crisis management”, “war crisis” and “conflict crisis”. Selection criteria for existing literature were based on relevance to the topic, quality of research, and theoretical contribution. Content analysis was performed to identify key themes and patterns referencing war, supply, sourcing capabilities, and sustainability. A detailed, systematic, and rigorous review of relevant literature, theories, and concepts in the field resulted in the identification of strategic activities for fostering cost-effective practices. Sustainable performance, by this account, can be achieved by assessing damage to supply chains and compensating for oil, gas, and energy flow vulnerabilities during crises. When pre-existing channels are cut off, resilient enterprises quickly use their human, infrastructural, and technological internal capabilities to rapidly obtain distinct auxiliary resources for production and manufacturing. By analyzing and synthesizing existing frameworks and concepts, we integrated current knowledge and recent developments on key variables. The research indicates that functional capabilities, such as continuous material flow, input diversification, environmental constraint management, and coordination among different organizational units, improve organizational sustainability. This will help to avoid bankruptcy when resources are scarce, and first-tier suppliers are located in conflict-affected countries. The paper identifies the drivers of resource availability, namely frequency in resource discovery, technological change in extraction methods, cons
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ispartof Environment, development and sustainability, 2024-12, Vol.26 (12), p.30001-30026
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subjects Bankruptcy
Conceptual models
Content analysis
Coordination
Cost analysis
cost effectiveness
Damage assessment
disaster recovery
Diversification
economic crises
Economic crisis
Economic performance
Economics
Energy flow
Environmental management
Extraction
humans
Literature reviews
Management of crises
oils
Plant layout
Political risk
politics
Resource availability
Scarcity
Selection criteria
Sourcing
Stabilization
Supply
Supply chains
Sustainability
Synthesis
Technological change
War
title Sustaining company performance during the war-induced crisis using sourcing capability and substitute input
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