A dynamic theory for the integration of social and economic networks with applications to supply chain and financial networks

Uzzi (1996, p. 674) highlighted that there is a “growing need to understand how social structure assists or impedes economic performance.” In this dissertation, I contribute to this understanding by constructing dynamic supernetwork models that explicitly integrate social networks with economic netw...

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Main Author: Wakolbinger, Tina B
Language:ENG
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3275814
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spelling ndltd-UMASS-oai-scholarworks.umass.edu-dissertations-47142020-12-02T14:30:08Z A dynamic theory for the integration of social and economic networks with applications to supply chain and financial networks Wakolbinger, Tina B Uzzi (1996, p. 674) highlighted that there is a “growing need to understand how social structure assists or impedes economic performance.” In this dissertation, I contribute to this understanding by constructing dynamic supernetwork models that explicitly integrate social networks with economic network models and that rigorously capture the role that relationship levels play. The research in this dissertation is motivated by the growing literature that empirically and theoretically highlights the importance of relationships in supply chains (cf. Cannon and Perreault (1999), Bernardes and Fensterseifer (2004), and Baker and Faulkner (2004)) and financial transactions (cf. Berger and Udell (1995), Anthony (1997), and Uzzi (1999)). As this literature shows, the existence of appropriate social networks can affect not only the risk associated with the transactions but also transaction costs. By explicitly including the role that relationships play in economic transactions, I extend the previous research on supply chain network models (see, for example, Nagurney, Dong, and Zhang (2002), Nagurney, Cruz, and Matsypura (2003), and Nagurney and Matsypura (2005)). Furthermore, I extend the literature on financial network models (see, for example, Nagurney and Ke (2001, 2003) and Nagurney and Cruz (2003a,b, 2004)). Specifically, I first develop a model consisting of an integrated supply chain and social network. I then construct a model consisting of an integrated financial and social network. Finally, I extend both these models to an international setting. The social networks consist of relationships of different strength as they have been described in the papers by Granovetter (1973), Freeman, Borgatti, and White (1991), and Golicic, Foggin, and Mentzer (2003). The “supernetwork” models describe how the behavior of the multicriteria decision-makers and induced flows influence the co-evolution of social and economic networks. Numerical examples highlight the unique ability of this framework to analyze the interaction between the social network and the economic network. The models are based on variational inequality theory for the study of the equilibrium states (cf. Nagurney (1999)) and projected dynamical systems theory for the study of the associated dynamics (cf. Nagurney and Zhang (1996a)). 2007-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3275814 Doctoral Dissertations Available from Proquest ENG ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Management|Operations research
collection NDLTD
language ENG
sources NDLTD
topic Management|Operations research
spellingShingle Management|Operations research
Wakolbinger, Tina B
A dynamic theory for the integration of social and economic networks with applications to supply chain and financial networks
description Uzzi (1996, p. 674) highlighted that there is a “growing need to understand how social structure assists or impedes economic performance.” In this dissertation, I contribute to this understanding by constructing dynamic supernetwork models that explicitly integrate social networks with economic network models and that rigorously capture the role that relationship levels play. The research in this dissertation is motivated by the growing literature that empirically and theoretically highlights the importance of relationships in supply chains (cf. Cannon and Perreault (1999), Bernardes and Fensterseifer (2004), and Baker and Faulkner (2004)) and financial transactions (cf. Berger and Udell (1995), Anthony (1997), and Uzzi (1999)). As this literature shows, the existence of appropriate social networks can affect not only the risk associated with the transactions but also transaction costs. By explicitly including the role that relationships play in economic transactions, I extend the previous research on supply chain network models (see, for example, Nagurney, Dong, and Zhang (2002), Nagurney, Cruz, and Matsypura (2003), and Nagurney and Matsypura (2005)). Furthermore, I extend the literature on financial network models (see, for example, Nagurney and Ke (2001, 2003) and Nagurney and Cruz (2003a,b, 2004)). Specifically, I first develop a model consisting of an integrated supply chain and social network. I then construct a model consisting of an integrated financial and social network. Finally, I extend both these models to an international setting. The social networks consist of relationships of different strength as they have been described in the papers by Granovetter (1973), Freeman, Borgatti, and White (1991), and Golicic, Foggin, and Mentzer (2003). The “supernetwork” models describe how the behavior of the multicriteria decision-makers and induced flows influence the co-evolution of social and economic networks. Numerical examples highlight the unique ability of this framework to analyze the interaction between the social network and the economic network. The models are based on variational inequality theory for the study of the equilibrium states (cf. Nagurney (1999)) and projected dynamical systems theory for the study of the associated dynamics (cf. Nagurney and Zhang (1996a)).
author Wakolbinger, Tina B
author_facet Wakolbinger, Tina B
author_sort Wakolbinger, Tina B
title A dynamic theory for the integration of social and economic networks with applications to supply chain and financial networks
title_short A dynamic theory for the integration of social and economic networks with applications to supply chain and financial networks
title_full A dynamic theory for the integration of social and economic networks with applications to supply chain and financial networks
title_fullStr A dynamic theory for the integration of social and economic networks with applications to supply chain and financial networks
title_full_unstemmed A dynamic theory for the integration of social and economic networks with applications to supply chain and financial networks
title_sort dynamic theory for the integration of social and economic networks with applications to supply chain and financial networks
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 2007
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3275814
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