View Full Paper

Owner Consent Verified
Coursework 4.8

Human Factors And Usability in Climate Policy for Supply Chain Managers: Evidence from North America

34
Pages
Harvard
Style
~ 36–51 mins
Reading Time
Health CV Cybersecurity
Abstract

This coursework investigates “Human Factors And Usability in Climate Policy for Supply Chain Managers: Evidence from North America” using a event study methodology. Through a economic lens, the analysis integrates multi-source data to derive an actionable roadmap for researchers and practitioners.

Human Factors And Usability in Climate Policy for Supply Chain Managers: Evidence from North America

ABSTRACT
Human Factors And Usability in Climate Policy for Supply Chain Managers: Evidence from North America is unpacked across themes: risks, scalability, security, and costs. Limitations and future research paths are noted.
1
Related Papers
Browse all
6 Pages 4.5
Public Health Adoption in Cross-functional Tech Teams: Human Factors And Usability — Evidence from DACH Region
DevSecOps Green Finance BioMed
11 Pages 4.2
Climate Risk and Interoperability among Mobile Money Users — A survey-based structural equation modeling
DevSecOps Psychology Marketing
12 Pages 4.3
Adoption Barriers in Data Privacy for Fortune 500 Firms: A Comparative Perspective
HCI Logistics Education