This research deals with the increasingly complex issues of
waste generation, waste management and waste disposal that in less
developed industrialised countries present diverse but critical
concerns. It takes a socio-economic and policy-oriented perspective
and provides empirical evidence at EU and regional level. The EU
and Italy are taken as relevant case studies given the disparities
in environmental performances between less and more developed
areas.
The rich and various empirical evidence shows that a robust
delinking between waste generation and economic growth is still not
present, thus future policies should directly address the problem
at the source by targeting waste generation in EU countries. Some
structural factors like population density and urbanisation present
themselves as relevant drivers of both waste management and
landfill diversion. Nevertheless, economic and structural factors
alone are not sufficient to improve waste performances. Though
waste policies are to be redesigned by covering the entire area of
waste management, some first signals of policy effectiveness are
arising.
This work will be of most interest to those students of
environmental economics and environmental sciences, as well as
policy makers, waste utility managers and companies in the waste
management sector.
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