TY - BOOK
T1 - Urban Slums and Circular Economy Synergies in the Global South
T2 - Theoretical and Policy Imperatives for Sustainable Communities
AU - Abunyewah, Matthew
AU - Okyere, Seth Asare
AU - Erdiaw-Kwasie, Michael Odei
AU - Boateng, Festival Godwin
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - This book takes a theoretical and empirical distance from urban slums/low-income settlements as a threat to environmental sustainability and recast them as places where environmentally rehabilitative and circular practices occur—drawing on the theoretical lens of the circular economy (CE). CE is defined as regenerative system that minimizes waste, emission, and energy leakage by slowing, closing, and narrowing material and energy loops. In principle, CE departs from the traditional linear model of take-make-use-dispose. As conceived in urban contexts, circular cities offer possibilities to regenerate natural systems, design out waste, and keep products in use. While the CE key principles of reduce, repair, and reuse are essential to the sustainable and inclusive interventions in urban slums, there is lack of case studies exploring the role of place and agency, especially the slum living-CE nexus in global south contexts. In inequitable urban transitions, a nuanced understanding of the synergies between urban slums and the circular economy is not only theoretically relevant for reconceptualizing the slum in urban sustainability discourses but also exert policy and practice ramifications to decidedly figure out how the urban slum phenomenon can foster the sustainable and inclusive development of marginal areas through contextual and people-centered initiatives.
AB - This book takes a theoretical and empirical distance from urban slums/low-income settlements as a threat to environmental sustainability and recast them as places where environmentally rehabilitative and circular practices occur—drawing on the theoretical lens of the circular economy (CE). CE is defined as regenerative system that minimizes waste, emission, and energy leakage by slowing, closing, and narrowing material and energy loops. In principle, CE departs from the traditional linear model of take-make-use-dispose. As conceived in urban contexts, circular cities offer possibilities to regenerate natural systems, design out waste, and keep products in use. While the CE key principles of reduce, repair, and reuse are essential to the sustainable and inclusive interventions in urban slums, there is lack of case studies exploring the role of place and agency, especially the slum living-CE nexus in global south contexts. In inequitable urban transitions, a nuanced understanding of the synergies between urban slums and the circular economy is not only theoretically relevant for reconceptualizing the slum in urban sustainability discourses but also exert policy and practice ramifications to decidedly figure out how the urban slum phenomenon can foster the sustainable and inclusive development of marginal areas through contextual and people-centered initiatives.
KW - Circular economy
KW - Slums
KW - Sustainability transitions
KW - Synergy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85191424492&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-981-99-9025-2
DO - 10.1007/978-981-99-9025-2
M3 - Edited Book
SN - 9789819990245
T3 - Advances in 21st Century Human Settlements
BT - Urban Slums and Circular Economy Synergies in the Global South
PB - Springer Singapore
CY - Singapore
ER -