Exploring the nexus between internationalization and sustainable supply chain management among UK SMEs
Exploring the nexus between internationalization and sustainable supply chain management among UK SMEs
This study investigates the interplay between internationalization and sustainable supply chain management (SSCM) practices among UK small and medium enterprises (SMEs). Drawing on 15 semistructured interviews with SME owner-managers and supply chain managers across industries in the United Kingdom, we examine the relationships among SMEs' international orientation, SSCM attitude, and practices. Interestingly, we find that stakeholders influence shifts with international orientation: Suppliers emerge as key barriers at the low level of international orientation, whereas customers become influential drivers at the medium level, and government regulations and diverse sustainability awareness present significant challenges at the high level. Notably, international orientation does not consistently influence SSCM attitude or determine the priorities in SSCM environmental and social practices. Some SMEs report that SSCM practices influence their international strategies, particularly in supply chain localization, supplier selection, and marketing approaches. This research contributes to understanding the complex relationship between international orientation and sustainability in SMEs, offering insights for practitioners managing international supply chains and policymakers supporting SME sustainability initiatives.
International orientation, sustainable supply chain management, SMEs, internationalization
Do, Hang
98fe3248-9673-4c6a-8f9a-74cf68a59930
Yan, Shuangqi
5e767e31-1da9-4bb7-854e-36ab6ec13c13
Gong, Yu
86c8d37a-744d-46ab-8b43-18447ccaf39c
Do, Hang
98fe3248-9673-4c6a-8f9a-74cf68a59930
Yan, Shuangqi
5e767e31-1da9-4bb7-854e-36ab6ec13c13
Gong, Yu
86c8d37a-744d-46ab-8b43-18447ccaf39c
Abstract
This study investigates the interplay between internationalization and sustainable supply chain management (SSCM) practices among UK small and medium enterprises (SMEs). Drawing on 15 semistructured interviews with SME owner-managers and supply chain managers across industries in the United Kingdom, we examine the relationships among SMEs' international orientation, SSCM attitude, and practices. Interestingly, we find that stakeholders influence shifts with international orientation: Suppliers emerge as key barriers at the low level of international orientation, whereas customers become influential drivers at the medium level, and government regulations and diverse sustainability awareness present significant challenges at the high level. Notably, international orientation does not consistently influence SSCM attitude or determine the priorities in SSCM environmental and social practices. Some SMEs report that SSCM practices influence their international strategies, particularly in supply chain localization, supplier selection, and marketing approaches. This research contributes to understanding the complex relationship between international orientation and sustainability in SMEs, offering insights for practitioners managing international supply chains and policymakers supporting SME sustainability initiatives.
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Accepted/In Press date: 2 January 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 January 2026
Keywords:
International orientation, sustainable supply chain management, SMEs, internationalization
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Local EPrints ID: 510094
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510094
ISSN: 0964-4733
PURE UUID: e0462b75-af61-4d45-81fd-191bdb67d219
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Date deposited: 17 Mar 2026 18:02
Last modified: 18 Mar 2026 03:09
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Author:
Shuangqi Yan
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