Urban Recycling and the Search for Sustainable Community Development


Hardcover
ebook (EPUB via app)
ebook (PDF via app)
- Sale Price:
- $55.00/£46.00
- Price:
-
$110.00/£92.00 - ISBN:
- Published:
- Jul 24, 2000
- Copyright:
- 2000
- 7 tables, 1 line illus.
50% off with code BLOOM50
-
Audio and ebooks (EPUB and PDF) purchased from this site must be accessed on the 91ÌÒÉ« app. After purchasing, you will an receive email with instructions to access your purchase.
About audio and ebooks - Request Exam Copy
More Americans recycle than vote. And most do so to improve their communities and the environment. But do recycling programs advance social, economic, and environmental goals? To answer this, three sociologists with expertise in urban and environmental planning have conducted the first major study of urban recycling. They compare four types of programs in the Chicago metropolitan area: a community-based drop-off center, a municipal curbside program, a recycling industrial park, and a linkage program. Their conclusion, admirably elaborated, is that recycling can realize sustainable community development, but that current programs achieve few benefits for the communities in which they are located.
The authors discover that the history of recycling mirrors many other urban reforms. What began in the 1960s as a sustainable community enterprise has become a commodity-based, profit-driven industry. Large private firms, using public dollars, have chased out smaller nonprofit and family-owned efforts. Perhaps most troubling is that this process was not born of economic necessity. Rather, as the authors show, socially oriented programs are actually more viable than profit-focused systems. This finding raises unsettling questions about the prospects for any sort of sustainable local development in the globalizing economy.
Based on a decade of research, this is the first book to fully explore the range of impacts that recycling generates in our communities. It presents recycling as a tantalizing case study of the promises and pitfalls of community development. It also serves as a rich account of how the state and private interests linked to the global economy alter the terrain of local neighborhoods.