Journal Screenshot

International Journal of Academic Research in Business and Social Sciences

Open Access Journal

ISSN: 2222-6990

Halal Food Supply Chain Implementation Model: A Measurement Development and Validation

Wan Marhaini Wan Omar, Shams Rahman

http://dx.doi.org/10.6007/IJARBSS/v8-i11/5566

Open access

The global demand for halal food products is growing throughout the world. However, research in halal food supply chain is relatively new. This study is conducted to develop and validate a measurement instrument for the halal food supply chain (HFSC) implementation model and confirms it as a higher-order construct. The measurement items of the dimensions used in the model are developed and validated based on a comprehensive multi-step approach prior to the large-scale survey. A questionnaire-based survey is distributed to 600 Malaysian halal certified food and beverage organisations. A total of 240 usable questionnaires are collected to confirm the underlying dimensions empirically. Confirmatory factor analysis is conducted to define the model of HFSC implementation and to confirm the HFSC implementation as a higher-order construct. The results revealed that nine dimensions are crucial and significantly define HFSC implementation as a higher-order construct. To our knowledge this is the first attempt to develop and validate the measurement instrument for HFSC implementation model. Theoretically this study contributes to the body of knowledge in defining and confirming the HFSC implementation as a higher-order construct. Furthermore, it provides a valid measurement instrument for further halal research in the context of other countries and markets.

Ab Talib, M. S. & Johan, M. R. M. (2012). Issues in halal packaging: a conceptual paper. International Business and Management, 5(2), 94-98.
Ab Talib, M. S., Hamid, A. B. A., Zulfakar, M. H., & Jeeva, A. S. (2014). Halal logistics PEST Analysis: The Malaysia perspectives. Asian Social Science, 10(14), 119.
Abdul Rahim, A. (2005). A concept of the clean toilet from the Islamic perspective. Journal of
Islam Built Environ, 1(1), 71-84.
Al-Qaradawi, Y. (2007). The Lawful and the prohibited in Islam. Kuala Lumpur: Islamic Book Trust.
Ali, M. H., Tan, K. H., Pawar, K., & Makhbul, Z. M. (2014). Extenuating food integrity risk
through supply chain integration: the case of halal food. Industrial Engineering & Management Systems, 13(2), 154-162.
Aung, M. M. & Chang, Y. S. (2014). Traceability in a food supply chain: Safety and quality
perspectives. Food control, 39, 172-184.
Awang, Z. (2015). SEM made simple: A gentle approach to learning Structural Equation
Modeling. MPWS Rich Publication, Malaysia.
Bagozzi, R. P. (1980). Performance and satisfaction in an industrial sales force: An
examination of their antecedents and simultaneity. the Journal of Marketing, 65-77.
Bagozzi, R. P., & Yi, Y. (1988). On the evaluation of structural equation models. Journal of the
academy of marketing science, 16(1), 74-94.
Bonne, K. & Verbeke, W. (2008). Religious values informing halal meat production and the control and delivery of halal credence quality. Agriculture and Human Values, 25(1), 35-47.
Chau, P. Y. & Hu, P. J. H. (2001). Information technology acceptance by individual
professionals: A model comparison approach. Decision sciences, 32(4), 699-719.
Fadzlillah, N. A., Man, Y. B. C., Jamaludin, M. A., Rahman, S. A., & Al-Kahtani, H. A. (2011).
Halal food issues from Islamic and modern science perspectives. In International Conference on Humanities, Historical and Social Sciences. IACSIT Press, Singapore (Vol. 17, pp. 159-163).
Gallagher, D., Ting, L., & Palmer, A. (2008). A journey into the unknown; taking the fear out
of structural equation modeling with AMOS for the first-time user. The Marketing Review, 8(3), 255-275.
Hair, J. F. (2010). Black, WC, Babin, BJ, & Anderson, RE (2010). Multivariate data analysis, 7th
Edn. New Jersey: Prentice Hall.
Hsieh, Y. C., & Hiang, S. T. (2004). A study of the impacts of service quality on relationship
quality in search-experience-credence services. Total Quality Management & Business Excellence, 15(1), 43-58.
Irfan, S. (2010). Consumer awareness: Thoughts and trends across the globe. Halal J, 2, 10-
11.
Jaques, T. (2015). Cadbury and pig DNA: when issue management intersects with
religion. Corporate Communications: An International Journal, 20(4), 468-482.
Kline, R.B. (2010). Principles and Practice of Structural Equation Modeling. 3rd edn. New
York: Guilford Press.
Lodhi, A-u-H. (2009). Understanding Halal Food Supply Chain. London: HFRC UK Ltd.
Mohd Albakir, S. N. W. S., & Mohd-Mokhtar, R. (2011, May). A conceptual design of genuine
Halal logo detector. In Imaging Systems and Techniques (IST), 2011 IEEE International Conference on (pp. 296-301). IEEE.
Mohamad, A. B., & Hassan, H. (2011). The influences of halal integrity on product adaptation strategy for global trade. International Business Management, 5(6 A), 421-426.
Nakyinsige, K., Man, Y. B. C., & Sazili, A. Q. (2012). Halal authenticity issues in meat and meat products. Meat Science, 91(3), 207-214.
Netemeyer, R. G., Bearden, W. O., & Sharma, S. (2003). Scaling procedures: Issues and
applications. Sage Publications.
Norman, A. A., Md Nasir, M. H. N., & Azmi, M. (2008). The users perceptions and
opportunities in Malaysia in introducing RFID system for Halal food tracking. Computer Journal WSEAS Transactions on Information Science and Applications, 5(5), 843-852.
Nunnally, J.C. (1978). Psychometric Theory. 2 edn. New York: Mc Graw Hill.
Nunnally, J.C. and Bernstein, I. (1994). The

In-Text Citation: (Omar & Rahman, 2018)
To Cite this Article: Omar, W. M. W., & Rahman, S. (2018). Halal Food Supply Chain Implementation Model: A Measurement Development and Validation. International Journal of Academic Research in Business and Social Sciences, 8(11), 2029–2043.