Supply Chains as Conduits of Anchor Engagement

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Supply Chains as Conduits of Anchor Engagement
Language: English
Authors: George Lodorfos
Source: Metropolitan Universities. 2025 36(1):176-193.
Availability: Coalition of Urban and Metropolitan Universities. 8000 York Road, Towson, MD 21252. Tel: 410-704-3700; Fax: 410-704-2152; e-mail: cumu@towson.edu; Web site: http://www.cumuonline.org
Peer Reviewed: N
Page Count: 18
Publication Date: 2025
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Evaluative
Education Level: Higher Education
Postsecondary Education
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Purchasing, Small Businesses, Business Schools, School Business Relationship, Urban Universities, Service Learning
Geographic Terms: United Kingdom (Leeds)
ISSN: 1047-8485
Abstract: This paper explains how Leeds Beckett University (LBU) has developed a supply chain "collective" to deliver on its mission as an anchor institution. The supply chain collective is made up of 300 small and medium enterprises that trade with LBU. These organizations, by subscribing to anchor principles, gain access to LBU's specialist business support advice and consultancy services provided by its Business School. This partnership arrangement offers the following benefits: it supports a shift to local purchasing and carbon reduction, provides direct business support to help small local businesses grow, and creates enriched service-learning opportunities for students and researchers. We begin by defining LBU's role within the Leeds City Anchor Network, and then examine how it has adapted its purchasing strategy to incorporate social value considerations, how it developed part of its supply chain as a small and medium enterprise (SME) "collective", and how the Leeds Business School has begun to build mutually beneficial relationships by using this new supply chain as a conduit for positive regional engagement.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2025
Accession Number: EJ1482078
Database: ERIC
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