Abstract

The labour-intensive task of waste collection for recycling is critical to contemporary forms of corporate circularity. In low- and middle-income countries, waste pickers underpin the recycling loop of the circular economy. Where informality and working poverty are the norm, waste pickers typically receive little social protection, work in dangerous conditions, and earn low wages. Nevertheless, waste pickers’ work addresses multiscalar environmental problems from localised flooding of plastic-clogged waterways, to preventing the release of greenhouse gases when plastic is burnt. Here, we review recent academic and grey literature on waste picking, the social circular economy, and corporate circularity to understand the role and position of waste pickers in the contemporary circular economy. We explain how given the recent outcry against plastic waste, and subsequent corporate commitments to plastic recycling, there has been greater action on material flows than in support of the people who move these flows. Overall, the corporate response remains limited, with a general preference for recycling over redesign and only a fifth of packaging accounted for. Based on this review, we present two models. The first is a hierarchy of plastic recycling showing the foundational role of waste pickers in the recycled plastics supply chain. As plastics move up the hierarchy, their value increases and working conditions improve. We also propose a new model for a socially restorative circular economy which provides fair pay, safe working conditions, social protection, legal rights, voice, respect, services, and education. Some governments, co-operatives, non-governmental organisations, and businesses are already working towards this—and their work offers pathways towards a new standard of fair trade recycled materials. We argue that for true sustainability and the best version of circularity to be achieved, deeply ingrained social challenges must be resolved.

Highlights

  • Recent moves to recycle our way out of the plastics problem must include attention to the waste workers making this possible

  • Public outrage with plastic pollution crystallised in 2017 following the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) documentary Blue Planet II, narrated by Sir David Attenborough, which built upon earlier scientific and journalistic work to publicise the extent of the plastics problem [22]

  • Circular economy thinkers and practitioners must pay attention to the working conditions for those engaged in recycling loops

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Summary

Introduction

Recent moves to recycle our way out of the plastics problem must include attention to the waste workers making this possible. All packaging to be reusable or recyclable, by Created an Impact Fund to tackle poor waste management through education, clean-up and Collect, reuse or recycle 1 million metric tonnes innovation working with NGOs to connect of plastic through direct actions and buy-back centres, sorting facilities, collectors partnerships, by 2030. To address these points, we focus on the role of labour within today’s incomplete and imperfect circular flows, highlighting the low quality of work available to waste pickers within the recycled plastics supply chain. We demonstrate how recent commitments to increased circularity of plastics have heightened corporate reliance on waste pickers Given this reinvigorated reliance on waste pickers, the paper concludes with a socially regenerative model for engaging waste pickers, which revalues the people involved in processing circular material flows

Literature Review
Conclusion
Findings
Ethics Approval Not applicable
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