Blockchain-Enabled Supply Chain Transparency, Risk Resilience, and Digital Transformation: An Integrated Theoretical and Empirical Synthesis
Abstract
The accelerating complexity of global supply chains, intensified by digitalization, geopolitical uncertainty, sustainability pressures, and volatile demand patterns, has exposed fundamental structural weaknesses in traditional supply chain management systems. These weaknesses include fragmented information flows, limited transparency, heightened operational and financial risk, and inadequate coordination among heterogeneous stakeholders. In response, blockchain technology has emerged as a transformative digital infrastructure capable of reshaping supply chain governance, trust mechanisms, and risk management architectures. This research article develops an extensive, theory-driven and empirically grounded examination of blockchain-enabled supply chains by synthesizing insights from operations management, information systems, risk management, sustainability science, and organizational theory.
Drawing strictly on the provided scholarly references, this study constructs a comprehensive conceptual framework that integrates blockchain technology with supply chain transparency, resilience, sustainability, and digital innovation ecosystems. The article elaborates on how distributed ledger technology fundamentally reconfigures supply chain information asymmetries, enhances traceability, mitigates opportunistic behavior, and supports real-time risk monitoring across organizational boundaries. It further explores blockchain adoption through the Technology–Organization–Environment framework, highlighting organizational readiness, technological maturity, regulatory conditions, and stakeholder acceptance as interdependent determinants of successful implementation.
Methodologically, the study adopts a qualitative, integrative research design based on systematic literature synthesis, consensus-based methodological reasoning, and interpretive theoretical analysis. Rather than reducing findings to simplistic metrics, the research emphasizes deep descriptive interpretation of blockchain’s operational, strategic, and socio-technical implications for supply chain systems. The results reveal that blockchain acts not merely as a transactional technology but as a governance infrastructure that enables new forms of collaboration, accountability, and risk-sharing. However, the study also identifies critical limitations, including scalability constraints, integration challenges, organizational resistance, and evolving regulatory ambiguities.
The discussion advances future research directions by linking blockchain-enabled supply chains with artificial intelligence, data analytics, organizational agility, and sustainability-driven value creation. The article concludes that blockchain adoption, when aligned with strategic intent and organizational capability, represents a foundational shift in supply chain management from reactive coordination toward proactive, resilient, and transparent ecosystems.
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