The Bakkie Brigade in Cape Town’s urban waste economy: exploring waste mobilities and the precariat

Magister Artium - MA === Solid waste management in South Africa is in a phase of transitioning. This transition entails the valorisation and diversion of recyclable waste away from landfills for the creation of a new secondary recycling economy. However, reclaimers within the Global South have bee...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Goeiman, Johnathan
Other Authors: Rink, Bradley
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/8121
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-81212021-04-09T05:10:40Z The Bakkie Brigade in Cape Town’s urban waste economy: exploring waste mobilities and the precariat Goeiman, Johnathan Rink, Bradley Bakkie brigade Urban waste economy Linkages Waste mobilities Neoliberalism Magister Artium - MA Solid waste management in South Africa is in a phase of transitioning. This transition entails the valorisation and diversion of recyclable waste away from landfills for the creation of a new secondary recycling economy. However, reclaimers within the Global South have been engaged in valorising waste through market-driven pricing. Localised and ‘informal’ as they are, they remain a significant source of labour for global capital. Their presence runs parallel to the emergence of green models such as the circular economy, coupled with contentious initiatives that aim at formalising and integrating reclaimers. Given the revitalised emphasis on the urban waste economy, inadequate attention has been given to understanding the linkages between the formal processing companies and informal waste reclaimers operating at the level of the street and landfill. 2021-04-06T07:03:13Z 2021-04-06T07:03:13Z 2020 http://hdl.handle.net/11394/8121 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Bakkie brigade
Urban waste economy
Linkages
Waste mobilities
Neoliberalism
spellingShingle Bakkie brigade
Urban waste economy
Linkages
Waste mobilities
Neoliberalism
Goeiman, Johnathan
The Bakkie Brigade in Cape Town’s urban waste economy: exploring waste mobilities and the precariat
description Magister Artium - MA === Solid waste management in South Africa is in a phase of transitioning. This transition entails the valorisation and diversion of recyclable waste away from landfills for the creation of a new secondary recycling economy. However, reclaimers within the Global South have been engaged in valorising waste through market-driven pricing. Localised and ‘informal’ as they are, they remain a significant source of labour for global capital. Their presence runs parallel to the emergence of green models such as the circular economy, coupled with contentious initiatives that aim at formalising and integrating reclaimers. Given the revitalised emphasis on the urban waste economy, inadequate attention has been given to understanding the linkages between the formal processing companies and informal waste reclaimers operating at the level of the street and landfill.
author2 Rink, Bradley
author_facet Rink, Bradley
Goeiman, Johnathan
author Goeiman, Johnathan
author_sort Goeiman, Johnathan
title The Bakkie Brigade in Cape Town’s urban waste economy: exploring waste mobilities and the precariat
title_short The Bakkie Brigade in Cape Town’s urban waste economy: exploring waste mobilities and the precariat
title_full The Bakkie Brigade in Cape Town’s urban waste economy: exploring waste mobilities and the precariat
title_fullStr The Bakkie Brigade in Cape Town’s urban waste economy: exploring waste mobilities and the precariat
title_full_unstemmed The Bakkie Brigade in Cape Town’s urban waste economy: exploring waste mobilities and the precariat
title_sort bakkie brigade in cape town’s urban waste economy: exploring waste mobilities and the precariat
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/8121
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