Christian Hendriksen

ORCID: 0000-0003-0987-329X
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Maritime Security and History
  • Community Development and Social Impact
  • International Maritime Law Issues
  • Regulation and Compliance Studies
  • Ethics and Social Impacts of AI
  • Global trade, sustainability, and social impact
  • Innovation and Socioeconomic Development
  • World Trade Organization Law
  • Arctic and Russian Policy Studies
  • International Arbitration and Investment Law
  • Supply Chain Resilience and Risk Management
  • Political Influence and Corporate Strategies
  • Global Financial Regulation and Crises
  • Interpreting and Communication in Healthcare
  • Sustainable Development and Environmental Policy
  • Complex Systems and Decision Making
  • Indigenous Studies and Ecology
  • Management and Organizational Studies
  • Artificial Intelligence in Law
  • Sustainable Supply Chain Management
  • Sustainability and Climate Change Governance
  • Quality and Supply Management
  • Outsourcing and Supply Chain Management

Copenhagen Business School
2022-2023

Abstract This article examines the theoretical and practical implications of artificial intelligence (AI) integration in supply chain management (SCM). AI has developed dramatically recent years, embodied by newest generation large language models (LLMs) that exhibit human‐like capabilities various domains. However, SCM as a discipline seems unprepared for this potential revolution, existing perspectives do not capture disruption offered tools. Moreover, is only technical but also social...

10.1111/jscm.12304 article EN cc-by Journal of Supply Chain Management 2023-06-06

Purpose This study aims to explain the value of using critical realist case research in supply chain management (SCM). While positivist focuses on generalizable law-like rules, and interpretivist explores social meaning, seeks make objective explanations that are bound by context. demonstrates how a synthesis causal reasoning contextual complexity allows for stronger theorizing SCM. Design/methodology/approach highlights possibilities conducting SCM investigating philosophical perspectives...

10.1108/scm-03-2022-0119 article EN Supply Chain Management An International Journal 2022-12-01

Abstract This article develops a micro-level theoretical perspective of business influence in international negotiations. By drawing on organizational institutional theory, the proposes that site-specific institutionalized norms can structure nature and extent power. The illustrates value this through an illustrative case study International Maritime Organization (IMO) interviews participant observation on-site dynamics during negotiations environmental shipping regulation. shows how, IMO,...

10.1017/bap.2021.21 article EN Business and Politics 2022-01-10

Although public sector organizations (municipalities, regulatory agencies, publicly controlled utilities, etc.), are pivotal in green sustainability transitions, a conceptualization of their transformative capacity is underdeveloped. Several strands literature pay attention to the concept 'capacity', but these remain disjointed. Conducting review, present paper identifies variations and understudied aspects concept. It proposes holistic conceptual framework based on three elements:...

10.2139/ssrn.4543261 preprint EN 2023-01-01

This paper argues for a conceptual shift in the understanding of Large Language Models (LLMs) withinethnographic and organizational studies, proposing framework that interprets biases LLMs not asextrinsic flaws, but as intrinsic culture. Drawing from Bruno Latour's Actor-Network Theory (ANT), thisstudy conceptualizes actants participate dynamically within networks human nonhumanentities. By recognizing reflective training data's cultural imprints, thisframework positions embedded cultural,...

10.31235/osf.io/kz2xc preprint EN 2024-07-02
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