Flowing toxics: E-waste field work in the Palestinian-Israeli space

Author:

Garb Yaakov1,Leblond Nelly2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology/Anthropology and Department of Geography/Environment, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Beer Sheva, Israel

2. The Bartlett Development Planning Unit, University College London, London, UK

Abstract

We draw on several emerging literatures on contamination and waste and our own fieldwork on e-waste contamination in a Palestinian-Israeli border space to describe a “flowing” approach to toxic phenomena. We use this term as a shorthand to underscore the particular complexities of the socio-material-biological node called “toxics,” and the corresponding epistemic, methodological, and moral demands of studying them. Some episodes from typical days of field work assessing the dispersal of heavy metals from sites of e-waste burning illustrate our claims. Even this attempt to use straightforward techniques to measure the presence of an object of apparent elemental materiality was continually permeated and unsettled by the inescapable flowiness of toxics. Their sources, generation processes and fates were mobile and multiscalar, remarkably patchy heterogeneous and contingent in ways that mattered. At issue was not (just) inadequate knowledge, but the inescapably relational biophysical and social nature of toxics; their entanglement not only with the technical means, processes and definitions that make them perceptible, but with the multiple and often disjunct social contexts that allow, inform, and motivate attention and access to toxics sites, and the production of knowledge from them.

Funder

Michael Fischer

United States Agency for International Development

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Public Administration,Environmental Science (miscellaneous),Geography, Planning and Development

Reference65 articles.

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Introduction to special issue: “Scaled ethnographies of toxic flows”;Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space;2023-11-28

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