SpringerBriefs in Business
2012
Humanitarian LogisticsCross-Sector Cooperation in Disaster Relief Management
Authors:
ISBN: 978-3-642-30185-8 (Print) 978-3-642-30186-5 (Online)
Cross-Sector Cooperation in Disaster Relief Management
Series:
SpringerBriefs in Business
Cozzolino, Alessandra
2012, IX, 48 p. 7 illus.
(gross) price
ISBN 978-3-642-30186-5
Immediately available per PDF-download (no DRM, watermarked)
About this book
- Suggests a list of tips on how to valorize crosslearning opportunities between logistics service provider (profit) and the humanitarian organization (non-profit) in disaster reliefs
Following the recent dramatic rise in both natural and man-made disasters, humanitarian logistics has received increasing interest from both logistics researchers and practitioners. Provided that logistics operations in the emergency response are effective and efficient, the impact of disasters on affected populations can be drastically reduced. Relief operations involve many different actors operating in complex relationships so as to effectively and efficiently meet the various challenges of preparing for and responding to disasters. In some very recent studies, inter-organizational interactions have emerged among these various actors as an interesting area of development. More research would seem to be required to move from inter-agency coordination to cross-sector cooperation among humanitarian organizations and companies, with a special focus on logistics companies. This book focuses on one specific open question: in logistics and supply chain management, what are the cross-learning opportunities for both the businesses and humanitarian organizations that cooperate in disaster relief through partnership agreements? In terms of the available academic literature and management practice, this subject is still a poorly explored research area, and so the present study is one of the first attempts to thoroughly investigate the issue.
Alessandra Cozzolino is an assistant professor of management at the Department of Management at Sapienza University in Rome, where she teaches innovation management and organization science. She gained her PhD in management and finance in 2007 at the same university. She also is a lecturer in management at Luiss Guido Carli University in Rome. Her research focus is in the areas of humanitarian logistics and supply chain management, logistics services provider strategies, packaging innovation management, and sustainability within supply chains and operations. Her more recent publications have appeared in
Journal of Humanitarian Logistics and Supply Chain Management and
European Journal of Innovation Management. The author can be contacted at:
alessandra.cozzolino@uniroma1.it.