Maria Caridi
Polytechnic University of Milan
54 Papers
403 Citations
Maria Caridi is an academic researcher from Polytechnic University of Milan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Supply chain & Supply chain management. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 53 publications.
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Papers
Environmental sustainability in fashion supply chains: An exploratory case based research
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the results of exploratory case-based research aimed at identifying three factors: the drivers that push companies to adopt “green” practices, the different practices that can be used to improve environmental sustainability, and the environmental KPIs measured by fashion companies.
592
Integrating the environmental and social sustainability pillars into the lean and agile supply chain management paradigms: A literature review and future research directions
TL;DR: In this article, a systematic literature review addressing the integration of lean, agile and sustainable supply chain management paradigms is presented, where 73 papers are analysed, deriving 6 different types of integration between lean and sustainable and agile & sustainable.
210
Multi-agent systems in production planning and control: an overview
Maria Caridi,Sergio Cavalieri +1 more
TL;DR: A large amount of research works on the adoption of multi-agent systems (MAS) in several industrial environments has flourished as discussed by the authors, which assumes the presence of several decision-making entities, distributed inside the manufacturing system, interacting and cooperating each other.
195
The benefits of supply chain visibility: A value assessment model
TL;DR: A structured method and set of assessment tools for quantifying the benefits that can be achieved through better visibility on the inbound supply chain, thus providing reliable estimates of likely KPI improvements.
189
Do virtuality and complexity affect supply chain visibility
TL;DR: This paper proposes a structured approach to quantitatively measure supply chain virtuality, complexity and visibility and applies this approach to six case studies to verify its usability and to gather preliminary empirical evidences.
179