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E-raamat: Supply Chain Immunity: Overcoming our Nation's Sourcing Sickness in a Post-COVID World

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This book provides a concerted supply chain perspective for dealing with pandemics on the scale of COVID-19.  Specifically, this book describes a new approach, supply chain immunity, to illustrate what is needed to fix our economy and healthcare systems.  The authors of this book are experts in supply chain management, health care supply chains, major systems acquisition, and contingency sourcing methods.  Based on first-hand experiences working during COVID in the depths of the nation’s supply chain failures, the authors develop important themes for private and public sector supply chain managers to consider in rebuilding a more immune supply chain.  The book is targeted at policy makers, academics, practitioners, and students of disaster response, public policy, healthcare, and supply chain management who are interested in learning contemporary lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic.  From the perspective of those who lived through the chaos, the authors further explore the application of novel concepts in joint planning, market intelligence, and governance related to a national pandemic or other global contingency.
Part I The Disease
1 COVID-19, A Rapidly Evolving Disaster in 2020
3(12)
2 Tragedy of the New Commons
15(14)
Part II Symptoms and Treatments
3 Slow Response
29(20)
3.1 Vaccine Hesitancy
29(3)
3.2 Testing: The Missing Link to Stop the Spread of COVID
32(5)
3.3 The Need for a Testing Strategy
37(2)
3.4 The Strategic National Stockpile (SNS)
39(6)
3.4.1 Current Capabilities
43(1)
3.4.2 Missing Capabilities
44(1)
3.5 Requirements for a Government Response
45(4)
4 Traceability and Transparency
49(8)
4.1 Transparency and Traceability
50(7)
4.1.1 Current State
50(1)
4.1.2 Future State
51(1)
4.1.3 A Supply Chain Spectrum for PPE
52(2)
4.1.4 Improving Our Vision
54(2)
4.1.5 Conclusion
56(1)
5 Flexibility and Global Independence
57(8)
5.1 Flexibility Through Improved Contracting
57(4)
5.2 Global Independence
61(4)
5.2.1 Current State
61(1)
5.2.2 Future State
62(3)
6 Persistent Market Intelligence
65(8)
6.1 Medical Intelligence Signals
66(2)
6.2 Supply Market Intelligence
68(5)
6.2.1 An Orbital Regime of Market Intelligence
69(4)
7 Equitable Distribution
73(14)
7.1 Equitable Distribution
74(2)
7.1.1 Current State
74(1)
7.1.2 Future State
75(1)
7.2 Government Policy Issues
76(6)
7.2.1 Leverages Existing Capabilities and Delivers Effective Outcomes
77(1)
7.2.2 Respects Constitutional Roles and Responsibilities
78(3)
7.2.3 Political and Operational Viability/Sustainability
81(1)
7.3 Conclusions
82(5)
Part III Immunity
8 Major Supply Chain Events of 2020 Beyond COVID
87(16)
8.1 Supply Chain Cyber Attacks
87(5)
8.1.1 The Critical Elements of Cybersecurity
91(1)
8.2 Supply Chain Weather Disruptions
92(5)
8.2.1 Natural Rubber
92(2)
8.2.2 Texas Freeze
94(2)
8.2.3 Factory Fires
96(1)
8.3 Manmade Disruptions
97(1)
8.3.1 Suez Canal
97(1)
8.3.2 Saudi Oil Fields
97(1)
8.3.3 3M Coolant Factory Shutdown
97(1)
8.4 Climate Disruptions
98(1)
8.5 Labor Shortages
98(1)
8.6 Russian Attack of Ukraine
99(4)
8.6.1 Shortfalls in Capital Expenditures and Production Capacity
99(2)
8.6.2 Summary
101(1)
8.6.3 A Global Supply Chain Crisis Model
102(1)
9 A New Model for Emergency Decision-Making and Planning in a Data Saturated World: The Goals, Decisions, Signals, Data Model
103(10)
9.1 Issue 1---Too Many Competing Goals
104(1)
9.2 Issue 2---Too Much Data and not Enough Direction to Leverage It
104(7)
9.3 Conclusion
111(2)
Appendix A National Contingency Supply Chain Cell (NCSCC) Notional Construct 113(8)
Appendix B Workshop Protocol 121(2)
Appendix C Supply Chain Act 123(2)
Appendix D Warstopper 125(2)
Appendix E Reinstituting the War Production Board 127(2)
Appendix F Global Sourcing Framework 129(4)
Appendix G "Dollar a Year Men" Policy Used in WWII 133
Rob Handfield is the Bank of America University Distinguished Professor of Supply Chain Management at North Carolina State University, and Executive Director of the Supply Chain Resource Cooperative. Handfield is considered a thought leader in the field of supply chain management, and is an industry expert in the field of strategic sourcing, supply market intelligence, and supplier development.  He has spoken on these subjects across the globe, including China, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Latin America, India, Europe, Korea, Japan, Canada, in multiple presentations and webinars. Handfield has published more than 120 peer reviewed journal articles and is regularly quoted in global news media such as the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, LA Times, Bloomberg, NPR, Washington Post, the Financial Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, and CNN.  He served on the Joint Acquisition Task Force during COVID which led to published articles on the shortages of PPE in the Harvard Business Review and the Milbank Quarterly Journal, and led a NIIMBL research team studying distribution of test kits during the pandemic. Daniel Finkenstadt is an Assistant Professor in the Graduate School of Defense Management offering courses in Enterprise Sourcing. Dr. Finkenstadt holds a Ph.D. in Marketing from Kenan-Flagler Business School, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (2020). He has over 18 years of defense contracting experience in operational (base level), systems center, headquarters, joint, overseas and classified environments. He is also a graduate of NPS (M.B.A., 2011). His research interests are perceived service quality, value, business-to-government markets, professional services (knowledge-based services), non-traditional government contractor motivations. He has published articles in the National Contract Management Association Contract Management Magazine, Defense Acquisition Review Journal,  Journal of Purchasing and Supply Management, International Journal of Operations and Production Management, the Milbank Quarterly, California Management Review and the Harvard Business Review. His most recent work centers around COVID-19 pandemic response supply chains and exploration into novel forms of gamified and simulated training for acquisition sciences. He is the Principal Investigator for the new Simulation and Ideation Lab for Acquisition Sciences (SILAS) at NPS.