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Urban sanitation and solid waste sectors are under significant
pressure in East Africa due to the lack of competent institutional
capacity and the growth of the region's urban population. This book
presents and applies an original analytical approach to assess the
existing socio-technical mixtures of waste and sanitation systems
and to ensure wider access, increase flexibility and ecological
sustainability. It shows how the problem is not the current
diversity in waste and sanitation infrastructures and services and
variety of types and scales of technology, of formal and informal
sector involvement, and of management and ownership modes. The book
focuses instead on the lack of an integrative approach to managing
and upgrading of the various waste and sanitation configurations
and services so as to ensure wider access, flexibility and
sustainability for the low income populations who happen to be the
main stakeholders. This approach, coined "Modernized Mixtures",
serves as a nexus throughout the book. The empirical core addresses
the waste and sanitation challenges and debates at each scale -
from the micro-level (households) to the macro-level (international
support) - and is based on the results of a five-year-long
interdisciplinary, empirical research program. It assesses the
socio-technical diversity in waste and sanitation and provides
viable solutions to sanitation and waste management in East Africa.
This book provides students, researchers and professional in
environmental technology, sociology, management and urban planning
with an integrated analytical perspective on centralized and
decentralized waste and sanitation configurations and tools for
improvement in the technology, policy and management of sanitation
and solid waste sectors.
Urban sanitation and solid waste sectors are under significant
pressure in East Africa due to the lack of competent institutional
capacity and the growth of the region's urban population. This book
presents and applies an original analytical approach to assess the
existing socio-technical mixtures of waste and sanitation systems
and to ensure wider access, increase flexibility and ecological
sustainability. It shows how the problem is not the current
diversity in waste and sanitation infrastructures and services and
variety of types and scales of technology, of formal and informal
sector involvement, and of management and ownership modes. The book
focuses instead on the lack of an integrative approach to managing
and upgrading of the various waste and sanitation configurations
and services so as to ensure wider access, flexibility and
sustainability for the low income populations who happen to be the
main stakeholders. This approach, coined "Modernized Mixtures",
serves as a nexus throughout the book. The empirical core addresses
the waste and sanitation challenges and debates at each scale -
from the micro-level (households) to the macro-level (international
support) - and is based on the results of a five-year-long
interdisciplinary, empirical research program. It assesses the
socio-technical diversity in waste and sanitation and provides
viable solutions to sanitation and waste management in East Africa.
This book provides students, researchers and professional in
environmental technology, sociology, management and urban planning
with an integrated analytical perspective on centralized and
decentralized waste and sanitation configurations and tools for
improvement in the technology, policy and management of sanitation
and solid waste sectors.
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