Annotated Bibliography Assignment - Team Green

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ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY ASSIGNMENT – TEAM GREEN

[1] Parwez, Sazzad, “Food Supply Chain Management in Indian Agriculture: Issues,
Opportunities and Further Research,” MPRA Paper No. 60441, posted 07 Dec 2014.
http://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/60441/
The paper examines the critical issues at each sub-system of the agriculture supply chain, starting
from the input to the consumer, with a view to integrating them in an efficient and effective
manner.
[2] Arpan Bowmik, “A Study on Logistic Regression Modelling for Classification in
Agriculture,” T8105 Indian Agricultural Statistics Research Institute 2009.
http://krishikosh.egranth.ac.in/handle/1/90556.
In this study, logistic regression modeling has been employed for classification purposes in the
field of agriculture. The data pertain to the area of agricultural ergonomics with dependent
variable as the presence or absence of discomfort for the farm laborers in operating farm
machineries along with associated quantitative and qualitative regressors.
[3] Mr. V.Ramachandran, Mr. M.Sundaram, “Supply Chain Management Practise in India,”
IEEE India Info. Vol. 14 No. 2 Page 100-106 Apr - Jun 2019.
This paper explains the entire field of supply chain management that has emerged from the
contribution of supply chain working professionals such as procurement staff, stores managers,
logistics trackers, inventory controllers, production planning personnel who are either directly or
indirectly involved in the manufacturing planning process.
[4] Murari Lal Gaur, “Transfiguring Indian Agrarian Warehousing Sector with Smart
Engineering, Managerial and Environmental Approaches,” IARJSET November 2018. DOI:
10.17148/IARJSET.2018.5113
The paper is focused on a plethora of issues, which are reviewed, realized, and researched to
retrieve realistic inferences on strengths, weaknesses, and futuristic potential for enriching the
agrarian warehousing sector in the country. It encompasses updated information & inferences on
prevailing status & types of agrarian warehouses, their shortcomings/potentials/opportunities
with probable discretionary rectifications/modifications. It also touches the role of innovative
enviro-friendly technological options (green materials during construction, greener supply
chains, energy savings, other environmental dimensions) during construction, operations and
maintenance of warehouses & logistic essentials, to achieve superlative transformations of the
Indian warehousing & marketing sector.
[5] Surabhi Mittal, “Demand-Supply trends and projections of food in India,” Working
Papers 2010, esocialsciences.com.
Paper draws upon some of the earlier work of the author on supply and demand projections of
food groups. But the coverage of this paper is much wider as it also includes projections on
demand and supply of sugar and oilseeds and not merely food grains and cereals.
[6] Paul Cashin, “Understanding India’s Food Inflation: The Role of Demand and Supply
Factors,” January 2016. https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2016/wp1602.pdf.
This paper investigates the demand and supply factors behind the contribution of relative food
inflation to headline CPI inflation. It concludes that in the absence of a stronger food supply
growth response, food inflation may exceed non-food inflation by 2½–3 percentage points per
year.
[7] Jabir Ali, Sushil Kumar, “Information and communication technologies (ICTs) and
farmers’ decision-making across the agricultural supply chain,” International Journal of
Information Management, Volume 31, Issue 2, 2011, Pages 149-159, ISSN 0268-4012,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijinfomgt.2010.07.008.
This paper explores how the information delivered to farmers with the help of Information and
Communication Technologies (ICT’s) aids in better decision-making capabilities among farmers
particularly in production planning, cultivation practices, post-harvest management and
marketing.
[8] Jinbo Chen, Ye Huang, Pengxiao Xia, Yuying Zhang, Yu Zhong, “Design and
implementation of real‐time traceability monitoring system for agricultural products supply chain
under Internet of Things architecture,” Concurrency and Computation, 31(10), e4766 03
October,2018. https://doi.org/10.1002/cpe.4766.
This paper discusses the application of Internet of Things and Near-field communication
technology to the agricultural product supply chain area and the role it plays in the intelligent
management and traceability of agricultural product supply chain.
[9] Xuan Pham, Martin Stack, “How data analytics is transforming agriculture,” Business
Horizons, January–February 2018, Volume 61, Issue 1, 125-13
Considering the entire value chain, the sequence of companies and transactions from agricultural
input manufacturers, agricultural retailers, farmers, processors, the food industry, food retailers
and food consumers, the authors chose to focus their discussion on the upstream connections that
link input suppliers, ag input retailers and farmers, as this is where most impactful innovations
are happening. Reflecting on the questions on our supply chain management and forecasted data
will help guide us in understanding what is coming next and how to best prepare ourselves in a
dynamic agriculture value chain environment.
[10] Sachin S. Kamble, Angappa Gunasekaran, Shradha A. Gawankar, “Achieving sustainable
performance in a data-driven agriculture supply chain: A review for research and applications,”
International Journal of Production Economics, Volume 219, January 2020, Pages 179-194,
ISSN 0925-5273, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpe.2019.05.022.
There has been increasing use of emerging technologies in the agriculture supply chains. The
internet of things, the blockchain, and big data technologies are potential enablers of sustainable
agriculture supply chains. These technologies are driving the agricultural supply chain towards a
digital supply chain environment that is data driven. understanding the level of analytics used
(descriptive, predictive, and prescriptive), sustainable agriculture supply chain objectives
attained (social, environmental, and economic), the supply chain processes from where the data
is collected, and the supply chain resources deployed for the same.

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