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An­dreas Wie­land

Associate Professor

Subjects
Innovation Supply chain Sustainability Green transition Qualitative methods Quantitative methods

Primary research areas

Sup­ply chain re­si­li­ence and trans­formation
A so­cial–eco­lo­gic­al view that moves bey­ond “com­mand & con­trol” and treats re­si­li­ence as on­go­ing ad­apt­a­tion, and when needed, trans­formation.
Geo­pol­it­ics and glob­al sup­ply chains
How trade ten­sions and geo­pol­it­ic­al changes re­or­gan­ize sup­ply chains and trig­ger change across mul­tiple levels.
Sup­ply chain emis­sions
Part­ner­ing with in­dustry to en­gage the sup­ply chain for Scope 3 emis­sions re­duc­tions and prac­tic­al path­ways to­ward de­car­bon­iz­a­tion.

Re­si­li­ence and trans­formation of glob­al sup­ply chains

I study how global supply chains adapt and transform under pressure by reframing them as social–ecological systems. My work connects supply chains to geopolitics and ecological crises, translating theory imports into empirical tests and actionable managerial/policy guidance. 

I serve as Co-Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Supply Chain Management (2022–2027) and am involved in externally funded projects, including a collaboration with Denmark’s Resilience Agency (SAMSIK). 

April 2025

Researching Like a Master Chef

An Expansion of the Quantitative “Kitchen Tools” in Supply Chain Management Research

Go to publication

January 2025

Taking Academic Ownership of the Supply Chain Emissions Discourse

Go to publication

2025

Understanding the Political Nature of Supply Chain Management

A Case Study of the Coffee Supply Chain

Go to publication

Recent research projects

DICE: Di­git­al Health in Cir­cu­lar Eco­nomy

DICE

Den­mark’s Re­si­li­ence Agenda with SAM­SIK

SAMSIK