Type | Thesis or Dissertation - Master of Arts |
Title | Female Waste Pickers in Cote D’ivoire. A Study of Women’s Livelihoods in the Informal Waste Management Sector of Abidjan. |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2011 |
URL | http://library.eawag.ch/eawag-publications/openaccess/Diplomarbeiten/SANDEC/Diplomarbeit_sandrabrechbuehl.pdf |
Abstract | Women are often regarded as counting amongst the most vulnerable social groups. Especially in developing countries, women continue to have fewer rights and access to assets than men. As a consequence, women have less access to decent work and are overrepresented in informal work that can weaken the benefits earned through employment. However, for many impoverished women informality offers the only opportunity to make ends meet. Accordingly, in Côte d’Ivoire women are most present in informal employment. In the city of Abidjan some women make a means of living through extracting valuable waste materials from streets, drains and dumps. These so-called waste pickers rely on waste as the basis of their livelihoods. Thereby, waste picking not only enables the making of livelihoods but also compensates for the failures of the public waste services. As many other rapidly urbanizing areas in developing countries, Abidjan faces the challenges of managing its increasing amount of waste. This master thesis concerns female waste pickers who work on the waste dump of Akouédo in Abidjan. It aims to deepen the understanding of women’s livelihoods as informal waste pickers and sheds light on their roles, needs and priorities in the thematic area of waste management in developing countries. The study applies the sustainable livelihoods framework (SLF) as a major conceptual reference. Data were collected during a field stay between April and August 2010. Thereby, three qualitative methods were chosen: 1. semi-structured interviews, 2. focus group discussions and 3. field observations. The interviews and focus groups were carried out with eleven female waste pickers and observations were made at their working and living places on and next to the waste dump of Akouédo. Additional data were collected from the husbands of the female waste pickers, their neighbors and representatives of the formal waste management in Abidjan. The results of this study reveal that the women’s livelihoods are exposed to several risks that influence their access to livelihood assets. Most seriously, the female waste pickers suffer from negative impacts on their health. More so, being labour migrants from the northern part of Côte d’Ivoire and surrounding countries, their status in local society is very low. What they gain is a low income, if any at all. Three main factors could be identified that influence the size of these risks, respectively the women’s access to livelihood assets: their backgrounds, strategies and activities, as well as the stage at which they are on the recycling hierarchy. Backgrounds: Côte d’Ivoire is traditionally a country with intensive internal and cross-border migratory movements. The female waste pickers are from the northern parts of Côte d’Ivoire and the surrounding countries Burkina Faso and Mali. As many other migrants they seek employment and better living standards in Abidjan. However, a deep gap in Ivorian society exists between those people from the North and the South. This social tension affects daily life and the low status of the female waste pickers in the village of Akouédo. Strategies: The female waste pickers follow three main strategies: restricting, supporting and investing. The Burkinabé restrict most costs by living in marginal conditions as they want to invest back inBurkina Faso. In contrast, the Ivorian and Malian work as waste pickers to support their impoverished families and make ends meet by paying current expenses or even investing in their children’s education, improving housing, and meeting additional expenses. Activities: The female waste pickers are involved in three main activities on the waste dump: collecting, upgrading and selling. Data show that skilled and experienced women who have access to financial resources mainly act in upgrading and thus, are not directly involved in collecting extracted valuable waste materials on the dump. Recycling Hierarchy: Waste pickers build the basis of the waste recycling industry in Abidjan. Especially the collectors perform labour at the bottom of a large waste recycling chain while those women who upgrade waste materials climb up the recycling hierarchy. They achieve a slightly higher income. However, collectors as well as upgraders are exploited by intermediate dealers who buy extracted materials from them before selling to industry. It can be assumed that the structures and processes in which the female waste pickers are involved also influence the women’s access to livelihood assets. Thus the study pays the greatest attention to structures and processes in which the women are involved in the household, on the waste dump and in the sector of the SWM in Abidjan. Household: The women are responsible for the household and care of children, and in addition, they play an active role in generating income. It can be said that the women’s participation in waste picking promotes a more balanced division of labour on the household level. Waste Dump: Gender inequalities also exist on the waste dump. It is hard for the women to participate in waste picking as it is physically demanding work and follows the winner-takes-all rule that puts women under the domination of men. What makes the female waste pickers most vulnerable is their manner of working individually. They are poorly organized and even compete with each other. Sector of the SWM: In addition, waste pickers are not integrated into the formal solid waste management of Abidjan. They form the basis of the recycling industries in Abidjan and put in the most intensive labour but receive the lowest esteem and are not recognized by the authorities. They do not receive any legal protection. Authorities see no value in waste picking, ignore and neglect the existence of (female) waste pickers. They regard waste picking as backward, unhygienic and not compatible with the modernization of the waste management system in Abidjan. As a final conclusion, it is recommended that the female waste pickers should start getting organised in order to reduce their individual vulnerability. Getting organized could enable the women to examine and articulate their collective interests and to actually realize them. The women’s income, health and even status in society could be improved. Most important they could become visible for the authorities, so that their rights and interests would become formally protected. The process would be a critical element in the economic, social and personal empowerment of female waste pickers that finally could promote gender equalities on several levels. The authorities should support this process by integrating (female) waste pickers into the formal waste management. This process would eventually also increase the efficiency in recycling and thus, the sustainable development in Côte d’Ivoire. |
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