INFORMALITY IN THE MANAGEMENT OF E-WASTE AND THE SOCIAL INSERTION OF ITS SCAVENGERS IN AGBOGBLOSHIE, ACCRA.

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21664/2238-8869.2021v10i1.p271-298

Keywords:

Informal Economy; Electronic Waste; Recycling; Urban Mining at Agbogbloshie E-waste dump

Abstract

Electronic waste is recognized as having the highest growth rate amongst all the hazardous waste in the world today. Informal sector workers play a central role in this chain where such waste is collected, recycled, and/or traded. This article aims to analyze the social insertion of e-waste collectors and the informality of this sector, in Agbogbloshie, Accra-Ghana, where the largest e-waste dump in the world is located and facilitated by International Cooperation and the importation of second-hand eletro electronic equipments from developed nations and NGOs. These EEEs have a very short life-cycle and end up being discarded as e-waste. As a methodology for this work, exploratory and descriptive research was used and a questionnaire was applied to 30 e-waste collectors at the Agbogbloshie e-waste dump and semi-structured interviews: with 10 scrap collectors, 5 scrap dealers, the coordinator responsible for Solid Waste Management of the Accra Metropolitan Assembly and, the coordinator in charge of e-waste at Zoomlion Ghana Limited. With governments failing to provide good working conditions and the necessary recognition to informal e-waste scavengers, they shoulder a very high health and wellbeing risk at the dump. E-wastes have highly valuable metals and other secondary materials that can be recovered through urban mining, but they also have dangerous toxic substances that contaminate workers and the environment, so their regulation is very important which seeks the welfare of these informal frontline workers. A conclusion is drawn that, these scavengers are included in the e-waste system at the most fragile point in the production chain and in a perverse way. They operate in the different activities of this chain, boosting the e-waste recycling market and the economy, but, socially, they are excluded from the social programs such as education, health, housing and social security.

References

Amoyaw-Osei Y, Agyekum, O O, Pawmang J A, Mueller E, Fasko R, Schluep M 2011. Ghana e-waste country assessment. SBC e-waste Africa Project. p.1–123.

Amuzu D 2018. Environmental injustice of informal e-waste recycling in Agbogbloshie-Accra: urban political ecology perspective. Local Environment, p.603–618.

Awumbila M, Owusu G 2014. Can Rural-Urban Migration into Slums Reduce Poverty? Evidence from Ghana. Migrating Out of Poverty, p. 1-41.

Banco Mundial 2015. Rising through Cities in Ghana. Ghana Urbanization Review Overview Report. 55p

Bhugra D 2010. S. Sassen (2007). A sociology of globalization. International Review of Psychiatry, p. 93-94.

Caravanos J, Clark E, Fuller R, Lambertson, C 2011 Assessing Worker and Environmental Chemical Exposure Risks at an e-Waste Recycling and Disposal Site in Accra, Ghana. Journal of Health and Pollution, p.16-25.

Grant R 2018. The " Urban Mine " in Accra, Ghana. RCC Perspectives, p. 21–30.

Grant R, Oteng-Ababio, M 2013. Mapping the Invisible and Real " African " Economy: Urban E-Waste Circuitry. p. 37–41.

Ghana Statistical Service 2017. Ghana Living Standards Survey. Report of the Seventh Round.

Housing the Masses 2010. People’s Dialogue on Human Settlements: Final Report on Community-Led Enumeration of Old Fadama Community, Accra-Ghana. Unpublished Report, Accra, Ghana.

International Labour Organisation 2002. Decent Work and the Informal Economy, Report VI, ILO, Geneva.

Labban M 2014. Deterritorializing Extraction: Bioaccumulation and the Planetary Mine. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, p. 560-576.

Lepawsky J 2015. The changing geography of global trade in electronic discards: Time to rethink the e-waste problem. Geographical Journal, p. 147–159.

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development 2009. Is Informal Normal? Towards more and better jobs in developing countries, OECD Publishing, Paris.

Oteng-Ababio M 2012. When necessity begets ingenuity: E-waste scavenging as a livelihood strategy in Accra, Ghana. African Studies Quarterly, p. 1–21.

Oteng-Ababio M 2015. Rethinking Waste as a Resource: Insights from a Low-Income Community in Accra, Ghana. In: Urban Development for the 21st Century, p. 97-127

Oteng-Ababio M, Amankwaa E F, Chama M 2014. The local contours of scavenging for e-waste and higher-valued constituent parts in Accra, Ghana. Habitat International, p. 163–171.

Oteng-Ababio M, Owusu G, Chama M 2015. Intelligent enterprise: wasting, valuing and re-valuing waste electrical and electronic equipment. The Geographical Journal, p 265-275.

Schlosberg D 2007. Defining Environmental Justice: Theories, Movements, and Nature, 237pp.

Sentime K 2014. The impact of legislative framework governing waste management and collection in South Africa. African Geographical Review, p. 81-93

Simatele D M, Dlamini S, Kubanza N S 2017. From informality to formality: Perspectives on the challenges of integrating solid waste management into the urban development and planning policy in Johannesburg, South Africa. Habitat International, p. 122–130.

Thieme T 2010. Youth, waste and work in Mathare: Whose business and whose politics? Environment and Urbanization, p. 333–352.

Thieme T 2015. Turning hustlers into entrepreneurs, and social needs into market demands: Corporate-community encounters in Nairobi, Kenya. Geoforum, p. 228–239.

Williams C C, Kedir A, Nadin S, Vorley T 2013. Evaluating the extent and nature of the informalization of employment relations in South-East Europe. European Journal of Industrial Relations, p. 91-107

Published

2021-03-03

How to Cite

GBEDEMAH, Stephen Edem; ZANETI, IZABEL CRISTINA BRUNO BACELLAR. INFORMALITY IN THE MANAGEMENT OF E-WASTE AND THE SOCIAL INSERTION OF ITS SCAVENGERS IN AGBOGBLOSHIE, ACCRA. Fronteiras - Journal of Social, Technological and Environmental Science, [S. l.], v. 10, n. 1, p. 271–298, 2021. DOI: 10.21664/2238-8869.2021v10i1.p271-298. Disponível em: https://periodicos.unievangelica.edu.br/index.php/fronteiras/article/view/4734. Acesso em: 24 nov. 2024.