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While “risk” is discussed, few textbooks provide frameworks for polycrisis navigation : simultaneous inflation, war, energy transition, and labor shortages. The assumption of a globalized, rules-based trading system (WTO norms) persists, even as de-globalization accelerates. 5. A Comparative Synthesis: What Textbooks Exclude | Dimension | Wave 1 (Operational) | Wave 2 (Integrative) | Wave 3 (Digital-VUCA) | What is missing? | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Core logic | Cost minimization | Value maximization | Resilience + Efficiency | Regenerative systems (net positive impact) | | Temporal focus | Short-term planning | Medium-term strategy | Real-time adaptation | Long-term path dependence (infrastructure lock-in) | | Human element | Labor as cost | Collaboration as tool | Algorithm as oracle | Power & labor rights (e.g., warehouse worker conditions, modern slavery in tier 3) | | Geography | National/Regional | Globalized (lowest cost) | Regionalizing | Spatial justice (uneven development, port city exploitation) | | Failure mode | Stockout | Bullwhip | Disruption | Collapse (systemic cascading failure beyond recovery) | 6. Toward a Fourth Wave: A Research Agenda for Future Textbooks We argue that the next generation of LSCM textbooks must abandon the linear, cost-optimizing legacy model in favor of four new pillars: 6.1 Pillar 1: Consequential Supply Chains Future books must treat Scope 3 emissions not as a reporting requirement but as a primary constraint, akin to budget. Introduce the Carbon-Equivalent Unit Cost (CEUC) as a first-class variable in all models. 6.2 Pillar 2: Cyber-Physical Labor Systems Textbooks need a chapter on socio-technical integration : how autonomous forklifts, wearables, and digital twins reshape warehouse labor. This includes ethics (algorithmic management, surveillance) and productivity. 6.3 Pillar 3: Geofinancial Supply Chains Replace the assumption of frictionless global trade with modules on currency controls, sanctions compliance, tariff engineering , and the fragmentation of standards (e.g., US vs. EU vs. China digital trade protocols). 6.4 Pillar 4: The Prepper’s Paradox Teach anti-fragile design (Taleb’s concept): supply chains that improve under volatility. This requires moving from risk mitigation (avoiding bad outcomes) to volatility harvesting (using disruption to capture market share from rigid competitors). 7. Conclusion: Books as Boundaries Logistics and supply chain management textbooks have performed an essential function: they transformed a set of fragmented practices into a coherent, teachable, and improvable discipline. But the canon has also become a boundary. By privileging linear models, cost optimization, and a depoliticized view of global trade, the current generation of texts leaves students unprepared for a world of climate-driven rerouting, labor activism in fulfillment centers, and supply chains as instruments of state power.
Modern texts enthusiastically describe “AI optimizing inventory” or “machine learning for demand sensing” but provide no mathematical or algorithmic literacy for managers. This creates a new form of deskilling: the manager becomes a dashboard-watcher rather than a systems thinker. logistics and supply chain management books
Abstract: The field of Logistics and Supply Chain Management (SCM) has undergone a meteoric evolution from a tactical military function to a strategic boardroom imperative. Central to this intellectual journey has been the role of the textbook. This paper argues that LSCM textbooks have not merely documented the evolution of the field; they have actively constructed its disciplinary boundaries, legitimized certain methodologies over others, and, in recent years, struggled to reconcile legacy linear frameworks with the emergence of autonomous, circular, and polycrisis-driven systems. Through a critical historiography of three dominant “waves” of textbook production (the Operational, the Integrative, and the Digital-VUCA eras), this paper reveals a persistent theory-practice lag and a methodological conservatism that may be ill-suited for the coming decade. We conclude by proposing a research agenda for the next generation of SCM literature. 1. Introduction: The Unseen Architect of a Discipline In most engineering or economics disciplines, textbooks follow theory. In supply chain management, textbooks often precede formal theory. The foundational texts of the 1980s and 1990s—by authors like Donald Bowersox, David Closs, Martin Christopher, and Sunil Chopra—did not find a pre-existing academic consensus; they forged one. These books transformed a collection of siloed activities (warehousing, transportation, inventory control) into an integrated system called “logistics,” and later, an extended enterprise called “supply chain management.” A Comparative Synthesis: What Textbooks Exclude | Dimension
Nearly every current text includes a sustainability chapter. Yet the core trade-off models (total cost minimization) remain carbon-blind. No mainstream textbook has yet replaced “cost” with “total cost + carbon + water + social cost” as the primary objective function. Sustainability remains an add-on, not an axiom. Introduce the Carbon-Equivalent Unit Cost (CEUC) as a
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