Description

Tuesday 24 - Wednesday 25 June 2025

Supply chains underpin much of the functioning of the economy, including critical sectors such as food, medicine, defence and engineering. Increased complexity, the adoption of lean management principles, and interdependence have resulted in increased vulnerability to disruptions that often spread through global networks, halting the flow of materials and services. Supply chain risk has been identified as a top business risk factor in a variety of industrial sectors and has been prioritised by numerous governments. The net zero transition, climate shocks, and increased geopolitical instability are expected to exacerbate the challenges faced by production networks.

Although there are already long-established academic fields that investigate supply networks, research is scattered across multiple disciplines, ranging from Manufacturing Engineering and Supply Chain Management to Complex Systems and Macroeconomics. To tackle modern challenges, however, the models that focus on understanding the supply chains of a single firm are too constrained in scope, and traditional macroeconomic models are too aggregate.

Our view is that we need a new generation of models founded on detailed, firm-level data which incorporate realistic firm behaviour, but also operate on a large scale, making predictions of economy-wide effects. What firm-level data on supply networks is available, and how can we reconstruct the missing pieces? What do we know about firm-level supply chain behaviour, and what do we learn from specific industries? What have we learned, in practical applications, from models calibrated on firm-level supply networks data?

In this fifth edition of the interdisciplinary workshop on firm-level supply networks, our aim is to answer these questions by marrying “micro” and “macro” perspectives, contributing to our long-run research agenda devoted to the development of realistic models based on global firm-level supply networks datasets.


Workshop agenda

If you need any information about the workshop agenda, please contact the organisers or email complexity@inet.ox.ac.uk.

Download workshop agenda


Registration

Registration for this event will be invitation-only in the first instance with remaining spaces filled through an open invitation. If oversubscribed, the organisers will assess/accept applicants to ensure the goals of the workshop are met.

Interested participants should contact the organisers, Christian Diem and François Lafond (University of Oxford); Alexandra Brintrup (University of Cambridge); Peter Klimek (CSH Vienna).