Preface: Recognizing Management in LCM
Other text in scientific journal, 2018

The Life Cycle Management conference 2013 took place in Göteborg, Sweden in August that year. During some very sunny days, nearly 450 presentations took place in front of more than 600 conference goers, leading to uncountable numbers of meetings, conversations, and reflections. A group that brought together different facets of management and policy-making research in relation to LCM was created as conference special issue editors. The group identified a need for systematized descriptions and analyses of life cycle-related practices in industry and in society at large. Preferably, the research should be grounded in the social and management sciences. The intention with the special issue was advancing LCM research, with an emphasis on the 'M' for management. The special issue includes 7 papers developed from the conference presentations. The combination of life cycles and management enables many kinds of LCM research. Novel terminology and perspectives to LCM research introduced by the included papers convey some of this diversity. Studies with a product chain perspective to LCM offer a complementing contrast to the study of corporate LCM. Advancement of LCM research can thus be achieved by expanding from the company perspective towards, looking deeper into the interactions of multiple actors. Also, critical perspectives have been shown to be valuable for the legitimacy and credibility of LCA and its practitioners. These studies show how deeper studies in the social sciences offer paths for the further advancement of LCM.

life cycle management (LCM)

life cycle thinking

sustainability governance

product chains

environmental management

Author

Henrikke Baumann

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Environmental Systems Analysis

Matthias Lindahl

Linköping University

Christina Scandelius

Brunel University London

Kirsten Schmidt

Aalborg University

Guido Sonnemann

University of Bordeaux

International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment

0948-3349 (ISSN) 1614-7502 (eISSN)

Vol. 23 7 1351-1356

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

Environmental Management

Economics and Business

DOI

10.1007/s11367-017-1368-x

More information

Latest update

1/8/2021 1