2022
DOI: 10.1177/11786302221085047
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Assessment of Community’s Perception Toward Single-Use Plastic Shopping Bags and Use of Alternative Bags in Jimma Town, Ethiopia

Abstract: Background: The use of plastic shopping bags increases and poses tremendous pressure on the local environment. However, little is known about its utilization among different population categories and their perception of its utilization and willingness to use other sustainable alternatives. This study aimed to assess the community’s perception toward the use of plastic shopping bags and its options in Jimma town, Ethiopia Methods: A community-based descriptive cross-sectional study design was conducted on 351 c… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…The more people disagree, the gain of online delivery rises at 1.865 degrees; the more people agree, the less they consume online delivery (OR value 0.543). It is proven by research from Misgana and Tucho (2022), which claims that a high level of awareness in the community would be vital for implementing policy measures on reducing single-use plastic bags. The more people don't have a proper waste collection, the higher they will consume online plastic delivery.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The more people disagree, the gain of online delivery rises at 1.865 degrees; the more people agree, the less they consume online delivery (OR value 0.543). It is proven by research from Misgana and Tucho (2022), which claims that a high level of awareness in the community would be vital for implementing policy measures on reducing single-use plastic bags. The more people don't have a proper waste collection, the higher they will consume online plastic delivery.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The attributes that we included in the model are those that are either communicated to customers through labelling or experienced by a customer during shopping. Furthermore, the non-degradability of plastic bags is an attribute that matters after purchase and is associated with the pollution which enters the society's welfare function as an externality [20,30]. As a result, it is difficult to justify the association between an individual's purchase decision and the non-degradability of plastic bags in our model since they do not incur the costs of pollution.…”
Section: Procedures Used In Designing the Choice Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This makes small plastic bags relevant for use as single-use packaging. Evidence shows that most consumers in developing countries prefer single-use plastic bags because their cost is negligible relative to the total purchase which also makes them 'cheap' to dispose of, though this type of convenience is undesirable [30]. Furthermore, small plastic bags compete for storage space that could be used to store other household items [33].…”
Section: Conveniencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is thus questionable if a ban would be a popular legislative intervention amongst business, while even in the event of attaining success, the fundamental issue, i.e., the excessive consumption of bags, albeit composed of different materials, remains an underlying concern. This underscores the necessity for a shift in mindset among South African consumers toward less consumption, as acknowledges by Raab et al (2023) and exaggerated by the fact that South African consumers acknowledge 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1252895 plastic bags as a concern yet continue to use them due to the convenience they offer (O'Brien and Thondhlana, 2019; see also Khanal, 2022;Misgana and Tucho, 2022). This transformation is crucial to curbing the initial consumption of plastic, rather than solely relying on regulatory alterations, although changing situational factors is often rightfully applied and can be very effective (Heidbreder et al, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%