An analytical framework of maritime disruption management within a supply chain
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This paper develops the concept of maritime disruption management (MDISM) from the context of maritime service users and providers in supply chains. In particular, the focus is on the manifestation of disruptive risk which is expanded from the concept initially proposed by Gaonkar and Viswanadham (2007) to include the delay, deviation, stoppage, or the loss of service platform as a result of a maritime disruption. Characteristics associated with the risk perceptions and instigating factors of maritime disruptions such as security and safety related factors, service and infrastructure, market, organisation and environment related factors are investigated including how MDISM is implemented by entities when managing maritime disruption and the strategies applied to detect, discover, and to recover from maritime disruptions. The data was obtained from the responses to a maritime disruption survey undertaken in 2009-2010 of 34 senior managers as maritime users, maritime providers and entities of a wheat supply chain between Australia and Indonesia. As a result the paper recommends four management strategies: 1) mitigation, 2) adaptation 3) coordination, and 4) intervention, as a means to manage unwanted maritime events that create disruptions in a supply chain. In addition, the research also find that the major restrictions to MDISM are the complexity of the supply chain structure because it discourages entities and maritime operators to change their risk management approach concerning various possible disruptive events.