Strategies for Legitimizing Regeneration in Supply Chain Fields
Other authors
Publication date
2026-03ISSN
1523-2409
Abstract
In view of escalating environmental degradation, regenerative business has been proposed to restore social–ecological systems. However, as regeneration fundamentally departs from mainstream approaches and lacks commonly accepted standards, it suffers from a liability of newness that hampers its broader legitimation and adoption. While prior research has studied legitimation strategies for individual organizations, less is known about how legitimacy is built in supply chains—a necessary condition given the systemic aspiration of regeneration. This paper explores the legitimation strategies used by pioneering regenerative producers to legitimize regeneration in supply chain fields. Drawing upon case studies of regenerative farmers in Spain, this study identifies six legitimation strategies, aiming at (i) consolidating the regenerative agrifood supply chain field or (ii) connecting it to wider agrifood supply chain fields. Contributing to the emergent literature on regenerative supply chains, the study explains how producers seek to legitimize regeneration in nested supply chain fields by unpacking their adaptive and systemic approaches targeted at different actors in the narrow regenerative agrifood supply chain field and the wider agrifood supply chain field.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Keywords
Pages
20 p.
Publisher
Wiley Periodicals LLC.
Is part of
Journal of Supply Chain Management
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Rights
© L'autor/a
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/


