Publication | Closed Access
Quality standards, conventions and the governance of global value chains
868
Citations
71
References
2005
Year
Value TheorySustainable Value CreationQuality StandardsConvention TheoryManagementValue Chain-specific QualitySustainable SourcingGlobal Value ChainComplex Quality InformationGlobal StrategyValue CreationInternational ManagementSupply Chain ManagementCorporate GovernanceStrategic ManagementValue Co-creationGlobalizationBusinessBusiness StrategyQuality Standards ComplianceValue ChainSocial Responsibility
Convention theory helps refine our understanding of the governance of global value chains through its analysis of ‘quality’. In this article, it is argued that global value chains are becoming increasingly ‘buyer-driven’, even though they are characterized by ‘hands-off’ forms of co-ordination between ‘lead firms’ and their immediate suppliers. This is because lead firms have been able to embed complex quality information into widely accepted standards and codification and certification procedures. As suggested by convention theory, their success in doing so has depended on defining and managing value chain-specific quality attributes that are attuned to broader narratives about quality that circulate within society more generally.
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