TLR — Turning Livelihoods to Rubbish? Impacts of Formalization, Financialisation and Technologization of Waste Management on the Urban Poor
This three-year project will examine global trends in waste management which are reducing access to the livelihoods generated from waste for the urban poor. Environmental concerns from different actors, and awareness of the financial benefits of waste are contributing to the formalization, the financialisation, and the use of technology to replace labour of handling waste. This could improve health for the urban poor, but also undermine livelihoods developed around waste and recycling and feeds into a wider arena of governance responsibilities.
We will examine specific interventions in South African waste management, from collaborative efforts between state and civil society to contested issues of using incineration to burn waste. In parallel we will trace national-to-international waste business/state capital relations, in particular those linked to clean development mechanisms. Together this seeks to understand competing claims to waste and the governance processes through which these claims are adjudicated. In collaboration with partners we will do desk-top research on the situation in Ghana and Uganda to increase the comparability of our research to low-income countries of Southern Africa. Theoretically we draw upon research in urban political ecology and development studies.
The project will be based at the School of Environment at the University of Manchester in collaboration with the Department of Geography at the University of Florida, the African Centre for Cities at the University of Cape Town and KTH Environmental Humanities Laboratory at KTH Institute of Technology in Stockholm. The project runs from 2016 to end of 2018 with fieldwork starting in 2017. The research team will engage stakeholders through two workshops in 2017 and 2018 and a regional workshop in 2018. Research outputs include video and digital story telling for wider dissemination.
Research Team
Principal Investigator: Professor Erik Swyngedouw (University of Manchester)
Co-I: Dr. Mary Lawhon (The Florida State University)
Co-I: Dr. Henrik Ernstson (ACC, University of Cape Town, KTH Stockholm)
PhD student: Ms Kathleen Stokes (University of Manchester)
PostDoc at ACC to be employed during 2016.
Funder: ESRC-DFID (Poverty Alleviation; Ref: ES/M009408/1)
Project time: 2016, 2017, 2018.
For more information and updates, visit the website.