2015
DOI: 10.1111/area.12160
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Alternative framings of transnational waste flows: reflections based on the Egypt–China PET plastic trade

Abstract: Through a discussion of Egypt-China trade in PET plastic, this paper seeks to show how contemporary recycling economies do not all conform to North-South directionalities, nor to the other assumptions about agency, vulnerability and environmental damage that inhere in the 'neo-colonial geographies of inequality' paradigm. In so doing, it seeks to contribute to developing more optimistic and nuanced alternative framings of global waste flows. The paper follows a two-part structure. The first half provides backg… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(16 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
(7 reference statements)
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“…Indeed, the UN-StEP project indicates that the majority of e-waste now comes from non-OECD countries [RELATED RESOURCE 4]. Harvesting activities therefore are no longer confined to the Global North, and there is not only evidence of networks of Chinese traders in Africa [170] but also of African (Nigerian) traders in China. Further research is required to document emergent research on South-South material flows, to establish how enhanced competition affects trader activities, and how firms supplying them respond to increased competition for their scrap.…”
Section: Future Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, the UN-StEP project indicates that the majority of e-waste now comes from non-OECD countries [RELATED RESOURCE 4]. Harvesting activities therefore are no longer confined to the Global North, and there is not only evidence of networks of Chinese traders in Africa [170] but also of African (Nigerian) traders in China. Further research is required to document emergent research on South-South material flows, to establish how enhanced competition affects trader activities, and how firms supplying them respond to increased competition for their scrap.…”
Section: Future Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A continental sized country such as Brasil has great regional variation in terms of recyclable material prices, which are all linked to commodity prices and to global market variation, as is the case all over the world [35]. On the other hand, Brasilian recyclable material is mainly utilized in the inner market and there is a lack of information and understanding about how the international recycling market works and how to participate in it.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Unlike flows of e-waste found in the Global North, waste arriving in Accra (and in the majority of the Global South) are generally sourced internationally (Grant 2006(Grant , 2016 Grant and Oteng-Ababio 2012), a reality that helps explain why and how the information technology (IT) revolution is changing established global e-waste trade dynamics. For example, instead of only the U.S., Canada, and countries in Europe, now China, India, and South Africa are emerging as dominant producers, sources, and destinations for electronic discard (Breivik et al 2014;Furniss 2015;Lepawsky 2014;.…”
Section: Ghana Within the Global Political Economy Of E-wastementioning
confidence: 99%