¶ … Transitioning of the Defense Transportation System Toward Complementing Best Practices in Supply Chain Management Efficiently and Securely
Distribution managers need to appreciate that management of defense supply chains is a rapidly-growing global phenomenon, with an overlap existing in management levels; right from the strategic national-level stakeholders to lower sustainment units at the activity levels. Strategic distribution changes have the potential of immensely impacting tactical implications. This paper aims to help absorb a few important precepts required for globally receptive logistics decisions. Distribution and material managers ought to review and internalize defense supply chains early on in the course of their career. The process of distribution is complex. Thus, material distribution management must include electronically sustainable supply-chain information systems for realizing true synchronization. After all, defense transport systems are CASs (complex adaptive systems) integrating comprehensive, dynamic components, and aim at discussing complex supply-network systems together with their co-evolutionary, dynamic processes. The CAS approach is capable of providing hints for understanding the co-evolution of supply network and its dynamic nature, as the approach incorporates built-in systems therein and their complexity. The overall contribution of this paper will be towards strengthening the theoretical argument of research works that have dealt with CAS and other supply chain subjects. Analyzing broader levels such as supply chain systems can be useful, since supply networks' evolutionary active nature may be considered similar to CASs. One can highlight the fact that it is necessary for practitioners to consider the complicated logic surrounding the management of supply networks.
In this context, System Dynamics, 'reverse logistics', and feedback mechanisms may prove quite useful. Further, the deployment of such tools has become easier due to advances in the computer aided simulation facilities that can now explore interaction and outcomes of each system on the other. This would not only help evolution to adapt to dynamic forces affecting logistics globally, but also aid swifter decision- making to support smoother operation at the execution levels.
Transitioning of the Defense Transportation System
Table of Contents
1. Introduction 1
1.1 Problem statement 1
2. Literature Review 2
3. Discussion of the problem 4
4. Discussion of new solution(s) to the problem 9
4.1 Stimulation of mechanisms promoting interactions 9
4.2 Encouraging autonomy within networks 9
4.3 Understanding the fact that learning is dependent on autonomy and interaction levels 10
4.4 Recognizing edge of chaos or creative space 10
4.5 Development of capabilities for influencing positive emergent effects 10
5. Conclusion 11
6. References 13
1. Introduction
Currently, the situation with security policy is threatened by Arab revolutions and changes in several Arab nations' regimes, giving rise to novel institutional, ethical, and political challenges. Therefore, states face external threats necessitating national security production and preservation (SIPRI, 2012). Subsequent tasks include war fighting, nonessential evacuation plans, peacekeeping and peace enforcement, as well as humanitarian tasks like disaster relief and humanitarian aid. According to German constitutional law (Article 87 a Grundgesetz (GG)), this complex range of responsibilities is mandatory upon militaries, and may be considered a service obligation in the purview of defense portfolios (Essig, Mohr & Tandler, 2014). Since armed forces come under public sector organizations, national governments finance them.
European Defense Agency's estimations revealed that, in the year 2009, the EU's (European Union's) 26 member nations spent 194 billion Euros in total on defense; this amount represents a large share of EU national budgets. 16.77% (i.e., 32.53 billion Euros) of these 194 billion Euros was devoted to defense procurement. In view of this colossal expenditure towards national security maintenance, national armies are, for many years now, facing increased pressures to reduce expenses (SIPRI, 2011; Essig et al., 2014), as well as to utilize resources efficiently.
Towards simultaneously safeguarding operational effectiveness and ensuring efficiency, defense forces must focus on their respective core competencies, whilst employing contemporary forms of financing and cooperation. The above trend is manifested through realization of a number of PPPs (private-public partnerships) or Public Finance programs, which have grown in number in the past few years (Hartley, 2002). The market for defense equipment, as has been mentioned previously, has considerable potential. In spite of relevant cost-cutting potential, militaries lack suitable management tools to guide acquire long-term links that traditionally characterize the defense equipment market.
1.1 Problem statement
An analysis of literature pertaining to traditional SCM (supply chain management) indicates a few steering tools, offered chiefly for private sector organizations. However, considering militaries' specifics, one cannot vouch for non-reflected application of existing management tools concentrating on business supply chains (Essig et al., 2014). Therefore, this paper's key aim is bridging this theoretical...
Second, greater education about the values and benefit of this approach to managing projects needs to be completed (Brady, Maylor, 2010). Third, the inertia and lack of motivation to change needs to be quantified and shown to managers to see how their lack of commitment and urgency are hurting their businesses. All of these factors center on the value of time and its precious nature as a resource (Brady,
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