Publication in conference proceedings
TESTING THE BOUNDARIES OF LEAN SUPPLY CHAIN THINKING: OBSERVATIONS FROM THE LEGAL SECTOR
Peter Hines (Hines, P.); Ana Martins (Martins, A.);
10th International Symposium on Logistics
Year (definitive publication)
2005
Language
English
Country
United Kingdom
More Information
--
Web of Science®

This publication is not indexed in Web of Science®

Scopus

This publication is not indexed in Scopus

Google Scholar

This publication is not indexed in Google Scholar

Abstract
Supply Chain Management has attracted much academic attention over the last twenty years with a Lean Thinking approach being widely discussed over the last decade. However, in the majority of these cases the focus has been on the manufacturing industry. Scant attention has been directed to the service sector, which in many advanced economies represents around 70% of GDP. Within this, research into the public sector, outside of a procurement environment, is even rarer, although the public sector can represent well over 40% of total GDP in advanced economies. This paper seeks to review this service environment within the legal sector through two public sector cases from Portugal and Wales. It seeks to understand: whether there are any existing exemplars, how Lean Supply Chain Thinking may be taken into this sector, where would you start, what would you do and what modifications you may require to do this successfully. It will also provide a tentative Lean Legal Supply Chain Model and Route Plan for the sector.
Acknowledgements
--
Keywords
Lean Management; legal system
Associated Records

This publication is associated with the following record: