Nothing goes to waste : sustainable practices of re-use among indigenous groups in the Russian North

In the last few decades, the literature on waste has soared and taken two main directions. Considering the assumption that waste is a natural category, which we need to 'dispose of', the scholarship on waste management and its sustainability offers mainly problem-solving propositions (e.g....

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Published in:Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability
Main Authors: Siragusa, Laura, Arzyutov, Dmitry
Other Authors: Department of Cultures
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: ELSEVIER SCI IRELAND LTD 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/314415
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spelling ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/314415 2024-01-07T09:46:17+01:00 Nothing goes to waste : sustainable practices of re-use among indigenous groups in the Russian North Siragusa, Laura Arzyutov, Dmitry Department of Cultures 2020-04-27T07:43:01Z 8 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10138/314415 eng eng ELSEVIER SCI IRELAND LTD 10.1016/j.cosust.2020.02.001 Siragusa , L & Arzyutov , D 2020 , ' Nothing goes to waste : sustainable practices of re-use among indigenous groups in the Russian North ' , Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability , vol. 43 , pp. 41-48 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cosust.2020.02.001 ORCID: /0000-0001-6991-2313/work/75565143 a51dc489-6156-4f0a-9842-adc7e8da6029 http://hdl.handle.net/10138/314415 000545267300007 openAccess info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess 6160 Other humanities Article publishedVersion 2020 ftunivhelsihelda 2023-12-14T00:12:14Z In the last few decades, the literature on waste has soared and taken two main directions. Considering the assumption that waste is a natural category, which we need to 'dispose of', the scholarship on waste management and its sustainability offers mainly problem-solving propositions (e.g., the 3Rs proposalre-cycling, re-using, and reducing-or 'circular economy'). The social scientific waste studies literature takes a more critical stance from its outset and advances a relational account of waste. We aim to bring those two main research streams into dialogue through a presentation of two case studies among indigenous communities in the Russian North. Not only we disclose the hidden biases of the notion of circular economy and other 'innovative' problem-solving practices in the waste management literature, but we also propose to pay more attention to non-hegemonic waste practices amongst communities, which are often overlooked in both the waste management and the social studies of waste literature. Peer reviewed Article in Journal/Newspaper Russian North HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 43 41 48
institution Open Polar
collection HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository
op_collection_id ftunivhelsihelda
language English
topic 6160 Other humanities
spellingShingle 6160 Other humanities
Siragusa, Laura
Arzyutov, Dmitry
Nothing goes to waste : sustainable practices of re-use among indigenous groups in the Russian North
topic_facet 6160 Other humanities
description In the last few decades, the literature on waste has soared and taken two main directions. Considering the assumption that waste is a natural category, which we need to 'dispose of', the scholarship on waste management and its sustainability offers mainly problem-solving propositions (e.g., the 3Rs proposalre-cycling, re-using, and reducing-or 'circular economy'). The social scientific waste studies literature takes a more critical stance from its outset and advances a relational account of waste. We aim to bring those two main research streams into dialogue through a presentation of two case studies among indigenous communities in the Russian North. Not only we disclose the hidden biases of the notion of circular economy and other 'innovative' problem-solving practices in the waste management literature, but we also propose to pay more attention to non-hegemonic waste practices amongst communities, which are often overlooked in both the waste management and the social studies of waste literature. Peer reviewed
author2 Department of Cultures
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Siragusa, Laura
Arzyutov, Dmitry
author_facet Siragusa, Laura
Arzyutov, Dmitry
author_sort Siragusa, Laura
title Nothing goes to waste : sustainable practices of re-use among indigenous groups in the Russian North
title_short Nothing goes to waste : sustainable practices of re-use among indigenous groups in the Russian North
title_full Nothing goes to waste : sustainable practices of re-use among indigenous groups in the Russian North
title_fullStr Nothing goes to waste : sustainable practices of re-use among indigenous groups in the Russian North
title_full_unstemmed Nothing goes to waste : sustainable practices of re-use among indigenous groups in the Russian North
title_sort nothing goes to waste : sustainable practices of re-use among indigenous groups in the russian north
publisher ELSEVIER SCI IRELAND LTD
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10138/314415
genre Russian North
genre_facet Russian North
op_relation 10.1016/j.cosust.2020.02.001
Siragusa , L & Arzyutov , D 2020 , ' Nothing goes to waste : sustainable practices of re-use among indigenous groups in the Russian North ' , Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability , vol. 43 , pp. 41-48 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cosust.2020.02.001
ORCID: /0000-0001-6991-2313/work/75565143
a51dc489-6156-4f0a-9842-adc7e8da6029
http://hdl.handle.net/10138/314415
000545267300007
op_rights openAccess
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
container_title Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability
container_volume 43
container_start_page 41
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