Hidden Power in Global Supply Chains

被引:0
|
作者
Nguyen, Trang [1 ]
机构
[1] Temple Univ, Beasley Sch Law, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA
关键词
CONTRACTUAL RELATIONS; LAW; BUSINESS; EXPERIMENTATION; COOPERATION; GOVERNANCE; INDUSTRY; RULES; TRADE;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
D9 [法律]; DF [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
Most consumers are familiar with brand names like Apple, Nike, and H&M, but few have heard of the actual offshore multinational enterprises that make their products: Foxconn, Yue Yuen, TAL Apparel, and many others. This Article argues that these companies-whom I call "Big Suppliers"-represent a new crop of hidden corporate powers that have transformed the legal organization of global trade and production. In today's "made in the world" era, transnational suppliers, not brands, are the true quarterbacks of global supply chains. As manufacturing experts, they coordinate and oversee supplier networks spanning Asia, Latin America, and beyond. Acting at once as employers, landlords, and quasiregulators, they manage the employment, housing, mobility, and social lives of millions of workers whose labor sustains global trade. Yet, legal scholarship has only begun to notice the presence of these new global capitalists. This Article is the first to systematically unearth the hidden impact of Big Suppliers on a suite of public and private law issues, including cross -border contracts, corporate social responsibility designs, trade regulations, private regulatory functions, and beyond. It makes three principal contributions: First, it identifies a critical yet largely overlooked power shift in the economic forms of globalization, that is, the reconsolidation of global production at the level of first -tier suppliers. Second, in revealing how transnational suppliers operate in a highly enmeshed market, it complicates the influential paradigm of "buyerdriven" globalization, which has long assumed that Global North brands are the key power holders in global trade. As this Article demonstrates, the narrative of buyer hegemony rests on an incomplete assumption that buyers can effectively exert pressure on their suppliers that has long undergirded important laws and policies such as corporate social responsibility designs. Third, this Article conceptualizes "norm assembly" as a process by which transnational suppliers, by virtue of their size and scale, act as critical sites of norm contestation, diffusion, and resistance. Norm assembly may be driven by agency, but could also happen simply as a by-product of a firm's organizational logic and economic arrangement. Ultimately, in revealing the engine under the hood of global supply chains, this Article identifies a group of new critical actors and opens up potential venues for inquiries and interventions at a moment of imminent shifts in the architecture of globalization.
引用
收藏
页码:35 / 84
页数:50
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Between Legitimacy and Cost: Freedom of Association and Collective Bargaining Rights in Global Supply Chains
    Li, Chunyun
    Kuruvilla, Sarosh
    Bae, Jinsun
    ILR REVIEW, 2025, 78 (03) : 435 - 462
  • [42] The challenge of improving work health and safety in global supply chains: Institutions and evidence of effectiveness
    Walters, David
    Johnstone, Richard
    James, Phil
    ECONOMIC AND INDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACY, 2024,
  • [43] 'Social compliance decoupling cascades' in global supply chains: A review of the implementation of labour codes
    Cao, Yinyin
    Jayasinghe, Mevan
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT REVIEWS, 2024, 26 (03) : 344 - 368
  • [44] Subpolitics and sustainability reporting boundaries. The case of working conditions in global supply chains
    Antonini, Carla
    Beck, Cornelia
    Larrinaga, Carlos
    ACCOUNTING AUDITING & ACCOUNTABILITY JOURNAL, 2020, 33 (07): : 1535 - 1567
  • [45] The Ineffectiveness of CSR: Understanding Garment Company Commitments to Living Wages in Global Supply Chains
    LeBaron, Genevieve
    Edwards, Remi
    Hunt, Tom
    Sempere, Charline
    Kyritsis, Penelope
    NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY, 2022, 27 (01) : 99 - 115
  • [46] Impacts of power dynamics and gray markets on supply chains
    Li, Hai
    Shao, Jing
    Zhu, Stuart X.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PRODUCTION ECONOMICS, 2020, 222
  • [47] Linking power and inequality in global value chains
    Lang, Juliane
    Ponte, Stefano
    Vilakazi, Thando
    GLOBAL NETWORKS-A JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 2023, 23 (04): : 755 - 771
  • [48] Rents, Power and Governance in Global Value Chains
    Davis, Dennis
    Kaplinsky, Raphael
    Morris, Mike
    JOURNAL OF WORLD-SYSTEMS RESEARCH, 2018, 24 (01): : 43 - 71
  • [49] Social network analysis to understand the dynamics of global supply chains
    Meisel, Carlos A.
    Meisel, Jose D.
    Bermeo-Andrade, Helga
    Carranza, Laura
    Zsifkovits, Helmut
    KYBERNETES, 2023, 52 (09) : 2992 - 3021
  • [50] An Overview of Smart Manufacturing for Competitive and Digital Global Supply Chains
    Menon, Sarath
    Shah, Satya
    Coutroubis, Alec
    2018 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT, OPERATIONS AND DECISIONS (ICTMOD), 2018, : 178 - 183