Book contents
1 - The Public Problem of Waste
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 October 2022
Summary
We are nowhere near ‘peak waste.’
Hoornweg et al, 2014: 117When we read news about waste – plastic bags clogging water drains in India and causing contaminated drinking water, child labour used to dismantle used electronics in Malaysia, space junk orbiting earth or PPE masks washing up on our shores – our waste problem seems clear: waste is being mismanaged! The solution appears similarly obvious: we must better manage our waste! But the devil, as the famous idiom goes, is in the details. What we understand the problem to be – the mismanagement of waste – depends on how we actually define waste. Whose waste are we referring to? Who should be responsible for managing it better? And what, more specifically, would register as ‘better’ waste management?
At first glance, the definition of waste seems equally obvious. Waste is all of that stuff that we once wanted but no longer want (Strasser, 1999). Waste is all of those things we put in our trash can, and if our local waste services are functioning well, are whisked away from our homes to quickly become out-of-sight and out-of-mind. Yet, waste turns out to be a rather complex problem involving different rightsholders and stakeholders, temporalities, geographies, political economies, transnational agreements, regulations and policies, and cultural traditions that disproportionately affect a range of publics. To introduce this complexity, let’s consider the following waste snapshots:
Snapshot 1
The Republic of the Marshall Islands is a United States associated state and comprises some 1,156 islands in the Pacific Ocean, north of New Zealand. With a total population of just over 58,000, most of its territory (over 97 per cent) is water. Beginning around the 10th century, successive waves of colonizers and settler colonizers claimed the islands, from Micronesians, to Spanish, to German, to Japanese, and finally to Americans during World War II. The US began nuclear bomb testing on the Marshall Islands’ Bikini Atoll in 1946 and continued detonating nuclear arms for over a decade. During this period, the US exploded 23 nuclear weapons, first above-ground and then underground. The second – Baker test – detonation contaminated all of the surrounding ships, leading Glenn T. Seaborg, chair of the Atomic Energy Commission, to call it “the world’s first nuclear disaster” (in Weisgall, 1994: ix).
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- A Public Sociology of Waste , pp. 1 - 13Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2022