“…Third, a supply chain perspective helps us understand how an environmental NGO selects commercial organizations to be held accountable (e.g., extended producer responsibility; Hickle, ) for hotspots, or to collaborate with to drive change via market mechanisms (e.g., eco‐certifications). SCM scholars have begun to take account of the pressures exerted, or opportunities provided, by civil society stakeholders such as environmental NGOs on organizations to improve supply chain practices with respect to environmental impacts as well as a host of social impacts (Hyatt & Berente, ; Sarkis, Gonzalez‐Torre & Adenso‐Diaz, ; Wolf, ). While traditionally these environmental NGOs operated from an activist perspective, many now go beyond activism to collaboratively engage corporate actors in supply chains in building awareness and identifying impacts for improvement and in some cases helping firms to implement more sustainable practices (Hyatt & Johnson, ; McDonald & Young, ; Meixell & Luoma, ).…”