Livelihood of Independent Waste Pickers (Tokai) at Dhaka City in Bangladesh: Does it Incidental Choice of them?
Md. Abdul Malak(1*), Sumaiya Fahim Prema(2), Abdul Majed Sajib(3), Nahrin Jannat Hossain(4)
(1) Assistant Professor, Department of Geography and Environment, Jagannath University, Dhaka, Bangladesh. and PhD Candidate, School of Geography and Sustainable Communities, University of Wollongong, NSW, Australia.
(2) Graduate research student, Department of Geography and Environment, Jagannath University
(3) GIS Officer, Caritas Bangladesh. Rajbari, VIP Road, Rajar Math, Bandarban Hill District
(4) Associate Professor, Department of Geography and Environment, Jagannath University
(*) Corresponding Author
Abstract
The study reveals the status of waste pickers, their livelihood asset profile and the vulnerability due to climatic and anthropogenic factors. It considered the independent waste pickers of Dhaka City, known as Tokai, who collect waste, especially recyclable and reusable materials. Using semi-structured interviews and personal histories, two groups of participants were explored qualitatively: independent waste pickers and other stakeholders. Waste-picking is sometimes the first source of income for persons displaced to Dhaka as a result of human and non-human changes. While most were homeless sheltering anywhere they could, they made a valuable contribution to the recycling industry and to improving environment and ensuring others' well-being, filling a gap left by councils failing to collect the waste produced daily by residents and industry. However, their efforts are largely unrecognized, and their labour stigmatized. Consequently, they have far less access to health, education, credit and utilities. Moreover, poverty and lack of family guidance may make them vulnerable to pursuing involvement in ill-advised political activism. The study concludes that the government and others need to shape a policy that takes into account the livelihood and survival needs of waste pickers and strive to ensure the provision of decent work within this sector and recognition of their societal contribution.
Keywords
Full Text:
PDFReferences
Ahmed, N. (2009). The sustainable livelihoods approach to the development of fish farming in rural Bangladesh. Journal of international farm management, 4(4), 1-18.
Anschütz J, Scheinber A (2005) UWEP City Case Studies, City Case Studies of Bamako, La Ceiba, Bangalore and Batangas Bay, the Four “PPS” Cities of the UWEP Plus Programme, 2001–2004. WASTE, Gouda, www. waste. nl.
Anschütz J, Scheinberg A, van de Klundert A (2004) Addressing the Exploitation of Children in Scavenging in Latin America: a Thematic Evaluation of Action on Child Labour. Geneva, Switzerland: ILO (International Labour Organization)/International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC).
Asim M, Batool SA, Chaudhry MN (2012) Scavengers and their role in the recycling of waste in Southwestern Lahore. Resources, conservation and recycling, 58:152-162.
Bahauddin K, Uddin M (2012) Prospect of solid waste situation and an approach of Environmental Management Measure (EMM) model for sustainable solid waste management: case study of Dhaka city. Journal of Environmental Science and Natural Resources 5:99-111.
Bonner C (2008) Waste pickers without frontiers. South African Labour Bulletin 32:7-9.
Carney D (1998) Sustainable rural livelihoods: What contribution can we make?. International Institute for Environment and Development (iied), London, UK
Chambers R, Conway G (1992) Sustainable rural livelihoods: practical concepts for the 21st century, Institute of Development Studies (UK).
Choudhury MUI (2015) Wetland-community resilience to flash flood hazards (Bonna) in Sunamganj district, Bangladesh. Master's thesis, The University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada.
DFID (1999) Sustainable livelihoods guidance sheets. London: DFID.
Dias S (2012) Waste and Development–Perspectives from the Ground. Field Actions Science Reports. The journal of field actions.
Dias SM (2016) Waste pickers and cities. Environment and Urbanization 28:375-390.
Elasha, B. O., Elhassan, N. G., Ahmed, H., & Zakieldin, S. (2005). Sustainable livelihood approach for assessing community resilience to climate change: case studies from Sudan. Assessments of impacts and adaptations to climate change (AIACC) working paper, 17.
Ellis F (2000) Rural livelihoods and diversity in developing countries. Oxford University Press, UK.
GLOPP (2008) A visual equivalent of CARE’s livelihood framework. Globalization and Livelihood Options of People Living in Poverty. http://www.glopp.ch/B7/en/multimedia/B7_1_pdf3.pdf. Accessed on 16 Jan 2018
Gunn SE, Ostos Z (1992. Dilemmas in tackling child labour: The case of scavenger children in the Philippines. Int'l Lab. Rev 131:629.
Gutberlet J, Baeder AM (2008) Informal recycling and occupational health in Santo André, Brazil. International Journal of Environmental Health Research 18:1-15.
Hai VM, Smyth I (2012) The Disaster Crunch Model: Guidelines for a Gendered Approach. OXFAM GB.
Hartmann C (2018) Waste picker livelihoods and inclusive neoliberal municipal solid waste management policies: The case of the La Chureca garbage dump site in Managua, Nicaragua. Waste management 71:565-577.
Hayami Y, Dikshit A, Mishra S (2006) Waste pickers and collectors in Delhi: poverty and environment in an urban informal sector. The Journal of Development Studies 42:41-69.
Huysman M (1994) Waste picking as a survival strategy for women in Indian cities. Environment and Urbanization 6:155-174.
Islam, M., & Chowdhury, T. A. (2021). Effect of COVID-19 pandemic-induced lockdown (general holiday) on air quality of Dhaka City. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, 193(6):1-16.
Kazi N (1999) Citizens guide for Dhaka. Environment and Development Associates (EDA) and Water, Engineering and Development Centre (WEDC).
Kemp-Benedict, E., Bharwani, S., De la Rosa, E., Krittasudthacheewa, C., & Matin, N. (2009). Assessing water-related poverty using the sustainable livelihoods framework. Stockholm Institute for Environment, Working Paper.
Kollmair M and Gamper JSt (2002) The sustainable livelihoods approach. Input Paper for the Integrated Training Course of NCCR North-South Aeschiried, 9–20 September 2002, Switzerland. Accessed 15 Sept 2012.
Liamputtong P (2011) Focus group methodology: Principle and practice. Sage Publications.
Maksud A K M (2010) In humane Conditions of the Waste Pickers of Dhaka City. Grambangla Unnayan Committee (GUC). Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Maksud AKM (2017) Waste Pickers and Recycling Industry of Dhaka City. Grambangla Unnayan Committee (GUC). Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Malak, M., Hossain, N. J., Quader, M. A., Akter, T., & Islam, M. (2021). Climate Change-Induced Natural Hazard: Population Displacement, Settlement Relocation, and Livelihood Change Due to Riverbank Erosion in Bangladesh. In Bangladesh II: Climate Change Impacts, Mitigation and Adaptation in Developing Countries (pp. 193-210). Springer, Cham.
Mapa, M. T., Powell, J. C., Asis, A. H. B., Sakke, N., & Gulasan, A. (2019). Waste Scavenging and Its Contribution for Survival and Urban Recycling in Kota Kinabalu City, Sabah, Malaysia. The Indonesian Journal of Geography, 51(2), 183-189.
Medina M (2008) The informal recycling sector in developing countries: organizing waste pickers to enhance their impact. World Bank, Washington, DC.
Mitra S (2016) Disease and health condition of scavengers in Bangladesh. East West University, Bangladesh
Morse S, Mcnamara N, Acholo M (2009) Sustainable Livelihood Approach: A Critical Analysis of Theory and Practice (University of Reading Geographical Paper 189). Reading, UK.
Moser CO (1998) The asset vulnerability framework: reassessing urban poverty reduction strategies. World development 26:1-19.
Navarrete-hernández P, Navarrete-hernández N (2018) Unleashing waste-pickers' potential: supporting recycling cooperatives in Santiago de Chile. World Development 101:293-310.
Pandey, R., Jha, S. K., Alatalo, J. M., Archie, K. M., & Gupta, A. K. (2017). Sustainable livelihood framework-based indicators for assessing climate change vulnerability and adaptation for Himalayan communities. Ecological indicators, 79, 338-346.
Parvin, M., & Begum, A. (2018). Organic solid waste management and the urban poor in Dhaka city. Int J Waste Resour, 8(320), 2.
Rahman, M., & Li, W. (2018). A sustainability livelihood approach (SLA) model for assessing disaster preparedness and resilience of the people: Case study of Cox’s Bazar Sadar Upazila in Bangladesh. Handbook of Climate Change Communication: Vol. 3, 35-61.
Rouse J, Ali M (2001) Waste Pickers in Dhaka: Using the Sustainable Livelihoods Approach: Key Findings and Field Notes. WEDC, Loughborough University.
Safier G (1977) Contemporary American leaders in nursing: an oral history, McGraw-Hill.
Sajib, A. M., & Moniruzzaman, M. (2021). Driving Forces of Landuse and Landcover Changes in the North-eastern Part of Dhaka Conurbation. The Dhaka University Journal of Earth and Environmental Sciences, 10(2):53-66.
Scoones I (1998) Sustainable rural livelihoods: a framework for analysis. IDS Working paper 72. Institute of Development Studies (IDS).
Scoones I (2009) Livelihoods perspectives and rural development. The Journal of Peasant Studies 36:171-196.
Serrat, O. (2017). The Sustainable Livelihoods Approach. In: Knowledge Solutions. Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-0983-9_5
Solesbury W (2003) Sustainable livelihoods: A case study of the evolution of DFID policy, Overseas Development Institute London.
Uddin SMN, Gutberlet J (2018) Livelihoods and health status of informal recyclers in Mongolia. Resources, Conservation and Recycling 134:1-9.
Uddin, S. M. N., Gutberlet, J., Ramezani, A., & Nasiruddin, S. M. (2020). Experiencing the everyday of waste pickers: A sustainable livelihoods and health assessment in Dhaka city, Bangladesh. Journal of International Development, 32(6), 833-853.
Ullah M (2008) Self-employed proletarians in an informal economy: The case of waste pickers of Dhaka city. https://excludedvoices.wordpress.com/2010/08/21/self-employed-proletarians-in-an-informal-economy-the-case-of-waste-pickers-of-dhaka-city/. Accessed 08 Dec 2020.
Wilson DC, Velis C, Cheeseman C (2006) Role of informal sector recycling in waste management in developing countries. Habitat international 30:797-808.
Yasmin S, Rahman MI (2017) A Review of Solid Waste Management Practice in Dhaka City, Bangladesh. International Journal of Environmental Protection and Policy 5:19.
Zhao, Y., Fan, J., Liang, B., & Zhang, L. (2019). Evaluation of sustainable livelihoods in the context of disaster vulnerability: A case study of Shenzha County in Tibet, China. Sustainability, 11(10), 2874.
Zia H, Devadas V, Shukla S (2008) Assessing informal waste recycling in Kanpur City, India. Management of Environmental Quality: An International Journal 19:597-612.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.22146/ijg.65461
Article Metrics
Abstract views : 2560 | views : 934Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.
Copyright (c) 2022 Md. Abdul Malak, Sumaiya Fahim Prema, Abdul Majed Sajib, Nahrin Jannat Hossain
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Accredited Journal, Based on Decree of the Minister of Research, Technology and Higher Education, Republic of Indonesia Number 225/E/KPT/2022, Vol 54 No 1 the Year 2022 - Vol 58 No 2 the Year 2026 (accreditation certificate download)
ISSN 2354-9114 (online), ISSN 0024-9521 (print)
IJG STATISTIC