Publication | Closed Access
Explaining Rural Household Participation in Recycling
36
Citations
11
References
1997
Year
Rural DevelopmentEngineeringHousehold RecyclingSustainable DevelopmentWaste DisposalEnvironmental EconomicsEnvironmental PlanningRural StudiesEnvironmental PolicyRural SociologySolid Waste ManagersRural Household ParticipationEnvironmental ManagementRecycling CostPublic PolicyEconomicsWaste ReductionMunicipal Solid WasteWaste ManagementCommunity ParticipationWaste PreventionCommunity DevelopmentRural EmploymentRural PolicyBusinessRecyclingSustainabilitySustainable Production
Abstract Rising landfill costs have forced solid waste managers to consider waste stream reduction alternatives such as household recycling. Explaining the factors which motivate households to recycle is important to regions where households must bear a large portion of the recycling cost because unit-based garbage disposal fees and curbside recycling are not feasible options. Empirical results indicate that residents are responsive to constraints introduced by the household production technology, such as time costs and storage space, but are not responsive to variables measuring a recycling promotional program. Promotion efforts should switch focus from broader “public good” benefits of recycling to reducing household-level household production constraints.
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