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Grassroots innovations in ‘extreme’ urban environments. The inclusive recycling movement

Author

Listed:
  • María José Zapata Campos
  • Sebastián Carenzo
  • Goodluck Charles
  • Jutta Gutberlet
  • Jaan-Henrik Kain
  • Michael O Oloko
  • Jessica Pérez Reynosa
  • Patrik Zapata

Abstract

Waste pickers all over the world work innovatively to reduce the environmental footprint of cities as they struggle to meet their critical livelihood obligations. Informed by the case of waste picker organizations (WPOs) this article examines how grassroots initiatives and extreme-niche innovations are created and sustained by mobilizing resources, rationales and relations. The study is informed by a cross-national survey and in-depth interviews with WPOs in Argentina, Brazil, Nicaragua, Kenya and Tanzania, and builds upon theories of grassroots innovation movements. The findings show how operating in contexts of extreme scarcity, these grassroots organisations tap into local resources , e.g. tacit knowledge, economies of affection and other socially embedded institutional resources. Blending material and environmental rationales , contributes to expanding their audiences and to gaining further support. In such deprived urban contexts, radical and cumulative crises and events hindering residents’ livelihoods can paradoxically also spark ingenuity out of necessity, and the transformation of these settings into extreme niches of innovation. Finally, the mobilization of relations through the formation of networks linking WPOs with supportive intermediaries and global circuits of solidarity becomes another fundamental resilience strategy by which WPOs can navigate contested environments and insert their extreme-niche innovations in governmental structures. By simultaneously adopting a broad repertoire of strategies of insertion, contention, and mobilization WPO and their innovations thrive in highly constrained environments. We conclude with reflecting on how ‘ extreme’ niches of innovation − at the cracks of the formal city, economy and waste systems − can unleash the creative power of stigmatized, illiterate and neglected grassroots to experiment with new solutions in resource-poor environments.

Suggested Citation

  • María José Zapata Campos & Sebastián Carenzo & Goodluck Charles & Jutta Gutberlet & Jaan-Henrik Kain & Michael O Oloko & Jessica Pérez Reynosa & Patrik Zapata, 2023. "Grassroots innovations in ‘extreme’ urban environments. The inclusive recycling movement," Environment and Planning C, , vol. 41(2), pages 351-374, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:envirc:v:41:y:2023:i:2:p:351-374
    DOI: 10.1177/23996544221118191
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    2. Paula Linna, 2013. "Bricolage As A Means Of Innovating In A Resource-Scarce Environment: A Study Of Innovator-Entrepreneurs At The Bop," Journal of Developmental Entrepreneurship (JDE), World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd., vol. 18(03), pages 1-23.
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