Scavenging for Survival and its Health Implications. The nexus between Unemployment and Ill-health

Author:

Iwu Chux Gervase1,Eze Franklin Ikenna1,Opute Abdullah Promise2,Dongo Gianni Utomhe3,Dongo Oluwatosin Wuraola4

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Business and Management Sciences, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa

2. Gprom Solutions, Salzkotten, Germany

3. Nigeria Governors’ Forum, Abuja, Nigeria

4. Infectious Diseases Institute, College of Medicine, University of Ibadan, Nigeria

Abstract

According to a popular adage, when the going gets tough, the tough gets going. With unemployment on the constant increase in South Africa, people are becoming more relentless in seeking means to earn a living. Waste picking has become, for example, an option for individuals in responding to the economic challenge in order to provide for themselves and families. By odd, the researchers refer to foraging in bins for items that have been discarded by others, which may be sold for cash. Although this practice offers an opportunity for self-employment, there is also a concern that those who deal in waste may be exposing themselves and perhaps their families to social stigma and health problems. This article looks at both the challenges of waste picking (more specifically health) and the desperate state of unemployment in South Africa. In doing that, we aim to address three central questions: (1) why are people waste picking? (2) Is waste picking a sustainable venture? and (3) what are the challenges in waste picking? To obtain deeper insights into the themes captured in the aforementioned research questions; face to face interviews were conducted with participants. Empirically, four central factors push participants into waste picking ventures: unemployment, retrenchment, unemployability, and the need for augmented income. Also, we found that although waste pickers continue the practice to sustain themselves and their families, waste picking does not sufficiently offer sustainable income, improved livelihoods nor reduced dependency on public social and health systems. There is a need to enhance the capacity of the South African public health system to adequately cater for those who regularly need its services and as this study has shown, the continuous practice of waste picking is synonymous with ill health and pressure on public health systems. We flag directions for future research.

Publisher

World Scientific and Engineering Academy and Society (WSEAS)

Subject

General Energy,General Environmental Science,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference93 articles.

1. Statistics South Africa. 2019. Quarterly Labour Force Survey: Quarter 1 (January to March) 2010. Retrieved from: http://www.statssa.gov.za [Accessed on 27 December 2019].

2. Peres, T.S., 2016. Stigma management in waste management: An investigation into the interactions of 'waste pickers' on the streets of Cape Town and the consequences for agency (Doctoral dissertation, University of Cape Town).

3. Samson, M., 2010. Reclaiming livelihoods: the role of reclaimers in municipal waste management systems. http://www.groundwork.org.za/Public ations/Reclaiming%20Livelihoods.pdf. (Accessed on 18 December 2019).

4. Viljoen, J.M.M., Blaauw, P.F. & Schenck, C.J., 2012. The role and linkages of buy-back centres in the recycling industry: Pretoria and Bloemfontein (South Africa). Acta Commercii, 12(1), pp.1-12.

5. Nyathi, S., Olowoyo, J.O. & Oludare, A., 2018. Perception of Scavengers and Occupational Health Hazards Associated with Scavenging from a Waste Dumpsite in Pretoria, South Africa. Journal of Environmental and Public Health.

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