Jumping the Chain: How Downstream Manufacturers Engage with Deep Suppliers of Conflict Minerals

Global manufacturing firms are engaging distant suppliers of critical raw materials to participate in responsible sourcing. Downstream firms are concerned about risks in mineral supply chains of violent conflict, human rights violations, and poor governance, but they are limited in seeing their supp...

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Main Authors: Steven B. Young, Shannon Fernandes, Michael O. Wood
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-01-01
Series:Resources
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/8/1/26
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spelling doaj-a1bb4e82bbc644e78082fb2dc391e96f2020-11-24T20:47:25ZengMDPI AGResources2079-92762019-01-01812610.3390/resources8010026resources8010026Jumping the Chain: How Downstream Manufacturers Engage with Deep Suppliers of Conflict MineralsSteven B. Young0Shannon Fernandes1Michael O. Wood2School of Environment, Enterprise and Development (SEED), University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, CanadaSchool of Environment, Enterprise and Development (SEED), University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, CanadaSchool of Environment, Enterprise and Development (SEED), University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, CanadaGlobal manufacturing firms are engaging distant suppliers of critical raw materials to participate in responsible sourcing. Downstream firms are concerned about risks in mineral supply chains of violent conflict, human rights violations, and poor governance, but they are limited in seeing their suppliers. Descriptive data on 323 smelters and refiners of tantalum, tin, tungsten, and gold (the “conflict minerals„) were complemented by interviews with downstream firms in the electronics industry. Results provided a narrative of supplier engagement, describing tactics used to identify “deep suppliers„ at chokepoints in metals supply and to persuade producers into joining due diligence programs. Top-tier firms collaborate through a standards program to overcame barriers of geography and cultural distance in supply chain management beyond the visible horizon. Curiously, manufacturers do not need line-of-sight transparency to lower-tier suppliers. Rather, top-tier firms are “jumping the chain„ to engage directly with “deep suppliers„ who may—or may not—be their own actual physical suppliers. The research contributes empirical evidence to understanding multi-tier supply chains, examines how power is exercised by top-tier firms managing suppliers, and provides insights on supply chain transparency. Responsible sourcing, based on due diligence guidance and standards, is becoming expected of companies that are involved in supply chains of raw materials.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/8/1/26responsible sourcingsupply chain due diligencemulti-tier supply chainstransparencysustainable supply chain managementcritical raw materials
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Steven B. Young
Shannon Fernandes
Michael O. Wood
spellingShingle Steven B. Young
Shannon Fernandes
Michael O. Wood
Jumping the Chain: How Downstream Manufacturers Engage with Deep Suppliers of Conflict Minerals
Resources
responsible sourcing
supply chain due diligence
multi-tier supply chains
transparency
sustainable supply chain management
critical raw materials
author_facet Steven B. Young
Shannon Fernandes
Michael O. Wood
author_sort Steven B. Young
title Jumping the Chain: How Downstream Manufacturers Engage with Deep Suppliers of Conflict Minerals
title_short Jumping the Chain: How Downstream Manufacturers Engage with Deep Suppliers of Conflict Minerals
title_full Jumping the Chain: How Downstream Manufacturers Engage with Deep Suppliers of Conflict Minerals
title_fullStr Jumping the Chain: How Downstream Manufacturers Engage with Deep Suppliers of Conflict Minerals
title_full_unstemmed Jumping the Chain: How Downstream Manufacturers Engage with Deep Suppliers of Conflict Minerals
title_sort jumping the chain: how downstream manufacturers engage with deep suppliers of conflict minerals
publisher MDPI AG
series Resources
issn 2079-9276
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Global manufacturing firms are engaging distant suppliers of critical raw materials to participate in responsible sourcing. Downstream firms are concerned about risks in mineral supply chains of violent conflict, human rights violations, and poor governance, but they are limited in seeing their suppliers. Descriptive data on 323 smelters and refiners of tantalum, tin, tungsten, and gold (the “conflict minerals„) were complemented by interviews with downstream firms in the electronics industry. Results provided a narrative of supplier engagement, describing tactics used to identify “deep suppliers„ at chokepoints in metals supply and to persuade producers into joining due diligence programs. Top-tier firms collaborate through a standards program to overcame barriers of geography and cultural distance in supply chain management beyond the visible horizon. Curiously, manufacturers do not need line-of-sight transparency to lower-tier suppliers. Rather, top-tier firms are “jumping the chain„ to engage directly with “deep suppliers„ who may—or may not—be their own actual physical suppliers. The research contributes empirical evidence to understanding multi-tier supply chains, examines how power is exercised by top-tier firms managing suppliers, and provides insights on supply chain transparency. Responsible sourcing, based on due diligence guidance and standards, is becoming expected of companies that are involved in supply chains of raw materials.
topic responsible sourcing
supply chain due diligence
multi-tier supply chains
transparency
sustainable supply chain management
critical raw materials
url https://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/8/1/26
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