Abstract

The need for green business practices and green innovations underscores a growing recognition that climate change is now an existential threat not just to population health but also to the survival of businesses that are unable to embrace green practices with a sense of urgency. This paper contributes to the literature on market violence as an inhibitor of green innovations for sustainable waste management to curb the unneeded health effects of wastes in Africa. Our purpose is to problematize received wisdom, unquestioned assumptions, and incorrect diagnosis of the sources and health consequences of various forms of wastes in Africa. Much of the discourse on this issue remains ahistorical, and that risks leaving aside a vital question of exploitative extraction. By including this ‘out-of-the-box’ explanation through major case references, we are able to shed light on the critical issues that have hitherto received limited attention, thus enabling us to propose useful research questions for future enquiries. We propose a framework that delineates the structural composition of costs imposed by market violence that ranges from extraction to e-waste disposal. We advocate for the engineering of policies that create conditions for doing more with less resources, eliminating waste, and recycling as crucial steps in creating sustainable waste management innovations. Additionally, we highlight a set of fundamental issues regarding enablers and inhibitors of sustainable innovations and policies for waste management worth considering for future research. These include programmed obsolescence, irresponsible extraction, production, and consumption, all seen through the theoretical lens of market violence.

Highlights

  • The need for green business practices and green innovations underscores a growing recognition that climate change is an existential threat not just to population health and to the survival of businesses that are unable to embrace green practices with a sense of urgency

  • We investigate the inhibitors to sustainable innovations and waste management through the theoretical lens of market

  • We investigate the inhibitors violence whilst eclectic research themes worth sustainable innovations and waste management the theoretical lens of market considering in the quest to further ourthrough understanding

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Summary

Introduction

“Plastic waste pollution: in 20 years majority of couples will not be able to have children” [1]. Sustainability 2021, 13, 6646 industry and national and regional policies/politics [9,10,11,12,13] in advancing sustainable global health [14] Against this background, this issue-based paper seeks to contribute to the literature on the health effects of environmental pollution and weakened social determinants of health (https://www.ban.org/e-waste; accessed on 4 June 2021); [15]) resulting from the indiscriminate dumping of dangerous wastes [1,16] in order to propose novel directions for future research. The question being answered is: how can the waste problem of Africa be reframed to offer more meaningful research questions and sustainable policy and techno-scientific innovations that create optimal health benefits?

Issue-Based Literature on Market Violence and Sustainable Waste Innovations
Method
Market Violence through E-Waste
Grappling with the Serious Fallouts of Health and Environmental Issues
How Do the Lack of Data and Political Will Undermine E-Waste Management?
Unmanaged and Mismanaged E-Waste Dumping as Market Violence
Planned Obsolescence
The Abandonment of the Culture of ‘Repair and Re-Use’
Unethical Consumption and E-Waste Production
Green Practices
Green Manufacturing
Impediment of Transition to GM
Findings
Conclusions and Limitations
Full Text
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