Waste Management Practices in the Informal Settlement: Functionality of Local Assemblies
Informal Economy and Sustainable Development Goals: Ideas, Interventions and Challenges
ISBN: 978-1-83753-981-9, eISBN: 978-1-83753-980-2
Publication date: 7 October 2024
Abstract
Waste management has become a topical issue among scholars, practitioners, and industrialists. This study extends the debate on waste within informal communities, highlighting the functionalities of local assemblies in Ghana, a developing country context. This study utilized the desk research regime situated within the qualitative approach. Several sources of data, including key policy documents in context, were used to inform the conclusion reached. The results show a lack of independence of local assemblies to enforce waste management by-laws in informal communities. It further indicates that limited waste management departments within the metropolitan, municipal, and district assemblies (MMDAs) and a lack of funds are to blame for effectively managing waste and sanitation in the informal settlements. Being desk research, the findings of the study should be carefully interpreted to reflect similar settings and characteristics across national, regional, and international contexts. The study explored the nuance of waste and sanitation management and discovered some setbacks to effective waste management, as well as practical ways of addressing them. This research is one of the few to examine waste management and sanitation-related issues within informal communities in a developing country context.
Keywords
Citation
Agyabeng, A.N., Mensah, J.K. and Acquah, A. (2024), "Waste Management Practices in the Informal Settlement: Functionality of Local Assemblies", Vinodan, A., Mahalakshmi, S. and Rameshkumar, S. (Ed.) Informal Economy and Sustainable Development Goals: Ideas, Interventions and Challenges, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 203-224. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83753-980-220241011
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2024 Anthony Nkrumah Agyabeng, James Kwame Mensah and Anthony Acquah