
Ending Plastic Waste
Community Actions Around the World
CABI Publishing
Published on 3. July 2023
Book
Paperback/Softback
200 pages
978-1-80062-361-3 (ISBN)
Description
Many informal organisations around the world are making a positive impact on the environment and their communities by turning waste into a resource, increasing the social capacity of their community and reducing the amount of pollution in their environment. Ending Plastic Waste: Community Actions Around the World presents a collection of stories, advice and information from experts in the fields of waste management, plastic pollution and environmental finance to give a broad outlook on how 19 programs from 14 different countries are protecting our planet. By sharing these journeys, the authors hope to encourage others to take a community approach to ending plastic waste. Perfect for decision-makers working in environmental and marine fields, industry stakeholders, and citizen scientist groups, this book provides guidance on how to successfully implement a new program, what resources are needed and the lessons learned by the people behind these programs in overcoming barriers.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Wallingford
United Kingdom
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 245 mm
Width: 170 mm
Thickness: 12 mm
Weight
500 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-80062-361-3 (9781800623613)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Britta Denise Hardesty (Edited By)
Dr Britta Denise Hardesty is a senior principal research scientist at CSIRO based in Tasmania, Australia. Her globally recognised work focuses on plastic pollution, and marine monitoring and surveillance to reduce illegal fishing.
Kathryn Willis (Edited By)
Dr Kathryn Willis is a marine socio-ecologist at CSIRO based in Tasmania, Australia. She is particularly interested in how communities can establish best-practice conservation management strategies in marine systems to maximise their environmental and social impact.
Justine Barrett (Edited By)
Justine Barrett works in the marine debris group at CSIRO in Tasmania, Australia. Her research is aimed at reducing plastic pollution from reaching our waterways and oceans.
Chris Wilcox (Edited By)
Dr Chris Wilcox is a senior principal research scientist at CSIRO in Tasmania, Australia. His research focuses on ecological impacts of marine debris and development tools for tackling illegal fishing. He is currently on secondment, working with the Minderoo Foundation, as the head of their Sustainable Fisheries Program.
Dr Britta Denise Hardesty is a senior principal research scientist at CSIRO based in Tasmania, Australia. Her globally recognised work focuses on plastic pollution, and marine monitoring and surveillance to reduce illegal fishing.
Kathryn Willis (Edited By)
Dr Kathryn Willis is a marine socio-ecologist at CSIRO based in Tasmania, Australia. She is particularly interested in how communities can establish best-practice conservation management strategies in marine systems to maximise their environmental and social impact.
Justine Barrett (Edited By)
Justine Barrett works in the marine debris group at CSIRO in Tasmania, Australia. Her research is aimed at reducing plastic pollution from reaching our waterways and oceans.
Chris Wilcox (Edited By)
Dr Chris Wilcox is a senior principal research scientist at CSIRO in Tasmania, Australia. His research focuses on ecological impacts of marine debris and development tools for tackling illegal fishing. He is currently on secondment, working with the Minderoo Foundation, as the head of their Sustainable Fisheries Program.
Editor
CSIRO Tasmania, Australia
CSIRO Tasmania Australia
CSIRO Tasmania Australia
CSIRO Tasmania Australia
Contributions
Content
1: Introduction. Britta Denise Hardesty, CSIRO, Australia, and Justine Barrett, CSIRO, Australia. 2: Plastic waste inputs and leakage: scale, drivers and solutions. Dr Winnie Lau, The Pew Charitable Trusts, USA. 3: Waste pickers: keeping after-use plastics circular, but at high personal cost. Costas Velis, University of Leeds, UK. 4: Community programs to reduce plastic waste. 5: A step-by-step guide to knowing your waste. James Baker, The Asian Development Bank, Philippines. 6: Finding seed funding for your project: the blue finance world. Azra Yaqub Vawda, independent consultant, Pakistan. 7: Designing a scalable program. Trish Hyde and Murray Hyde, founders of The Plastics Circle, Australia. 8: Closing thoughts. Chris Wilcox, Minderoo.