Abstrakti
In the last few decades, the literature on waste has soared and taken two main directions. Considering the assumption that waste is a natural category, which we need to 'dispose of', the scholarship on waste management and its sustainability offers mainly problem-solving propositions (e.g., the 3Rs proposalre-cycling, re-using, and reducing-or 'circular economy'). The social scientific waste studies literature takes a more critical stance from its outset and advances a relational account of waste. We aim to bring those two main research streams into dialogue through a presentation of two case studies among indigenous communities in the Russian North. Not only we disclose the hidden biases of the notion of circular economy and other 'innovative' problem-solving practices in the waste management literature, but we also propose to pay more attention to non-hegemonic waste practices amongst communities, which are often overlooked in both the waste management and the social studies of waste literature.
| Alkuperäiskieli | englanti |
|---|---|
| Lehti | Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability |
| Vuosikerta | 43 |
| Sivut | 41-48 |
| Sivumäärä | 8 |
| ISSN | 1877-3435 |
| DOI - pysyväislinkit | |
| Tila | Julkaistu - huhtik. 2020 |
| OKM-julkaisutyyppi | A1 Alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä, vertaisarvioitu |
Tieteenalat
- 6160 Muut humanistiset tieteet
Siteeraa tätä
- APA
- Author
- BIBTEX
- Harvard
- Standard
- RIS
- Vancouver