Public Perceptions of Waste Management in Sri Lanka: A Focus Group Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Moral Dimensions and Trust in Relation to Waste Management Practices
2.2. Environmental Awareness and Infrastructure in Waste Management Behaviour
2.3. Health Perspectives in Waste Management Behaviours
2.4. Extrinsic and Intrinsic Incentives in Waste Management Behaviours
2.5. Knowledge and Information in Relation to Waste Management Behaviours
2.6. Communicative Perspectives in Waste Management Practices
3. Methods
3.1. Participants and Data Collection
3.2. Data Analysis Procedure
4. Results
4.1. Perceptions of Waste Management at the Intersection of the Individual, the Entrepreneurial and the Societal
4.1.1. Non-System
“We don’t separate this stuff. What we do is we mix it all and burn. Like plastic, paper and everything. Something like food waste, we bury.”(RWP)
4.1.2. Public System
“Although the [notice] board in our locality says that they are supposed to come four times a week […] they only come twice in a week.”(UWP)
“They’re supposed to come once a week for this thing, and then two days later they come sometimes […] there are so many delays all the time […] people have their own landfills in their homes.”(SWP)
“They use a loudspeaker […] and say like we are collecting this stuff, but at that time we may not [be] at home and then they call, it’s not an organised plan.”(SCP)
4.1.3. Private System
“[…] if we have unnecessary stuff we give [the scrap collectors] and earn a little money. Bottle collectors haven’t come for some time.”(RWP)
“You get the street collectors coming, all of a sudden […] they don’t have a plan.”(SCP)
“I see that they take […] cardboard boxes and things like that, so they take that out and put it in different part of the truck… so I presume that they are able to kind of do something with that, or sell that.”(UWP)
“I think most of the supermarkets […] promote the recycled bag, you can purchase it and every time when you use it there is this royalty fee that they reduce.”(SCP)
4.1.4. Community System
“We promoted the composting, and such. And I think we were very successful.”(SCP)
“We organise the [scrap collectors] […] maybe once every month, but we have put up good collection centres.”(SCP)
“I should take this problem in front of our community gathering or a meeting once more. I should convince them that this is essential to us. […] If I can, I shall collect some names and get their support. After that I or someone shall go to the Urban Council. That can be done.”(RWP)
“We can’t breathe at nights, sometimes I shout at them. On the other hand if we go and tell them not to [burn waste] they come for an argument. And they angry with us. We live in a small village, we can’t stay like that, in [a] friendly manner we can live peacefully. We don’t know how to take action.”(RCP)
4.2. Synthesis of Perceived Waste Management Systems
4.3. Motivational Aspects of Waste Practices
4.3.1. Space
“When you check with the CEA, they will say okay so if you have enough land you bury it […] If you talk to the community level they will say okay, no it’s a small quantity, why don’t you bury it.”(SCP)
“Some have bigger lands. We have small lands. Those who live in bigger lands, they don’t have a problem [to bury waste].”(RWP)
“I’m trying to see whether I can get my whole road to [recycle], right but, who is going to give me the space, to put up [bins], they are all like taken by private houses.”(SWP)
4.3.2. Health and Environment
“I mean you don’t look after your garbage properly, you’re gonna get sick.”(UCP)
“Agrochemicals, empty bottles, they throw […] by the side of the paddy field, […] you get, you know streams […]. That is a disaster, I don’t know how we’re surviving.”(UCP)
“It is harmful to the environment. That’s why we should collect the polythene and give them.”(RCP)
“When we went to the hospital [my husband] is being told that not to burn plastic, that might be the reason for cancer. There are plenty of talks about this, People say that it is not good to burn them.”(RCP)
“We know it is not good to burn plastic. That is a basic reason for diseases. That is harmful to nature, but we don’t have any alternatives.”(RWP)
“We also like to live a life according to government health authority’s instruction and rules, but we don’t have any alternatives.”(RWP)
4.3.3. Payment
“Woman: And I think some countries they even charge for the amount of garbage […] I mean like a tax like you saidMan 1: In some countries I thought that they pay for the garbageWoman: As in?[…]Man 1: They buy it[…]Man 2: Then they tend to reduce the amount of garbageWoman: YeahMan 1: But anyway, they have separated properly, then only they do that one.”(UCP)
“Of course [the municipal garbage collectors] want to make money they want [to] make a living out of it. But, the component that they are contributing is very valuable from the point of view of the society and the environment.”(SCP)
“[The scrap collectors] are coming and collecting and they, they even ask but we are saying we don’t need any money, come and collect and go.”(SCP)
4.3.4. Hopelessness
“Most of the people won’t listen, they don’t have good attitude. We need proper laws like Singapore.”(RCP)
“We can tell to people to don’t do this thing but, what if they don’t have any option […] we have to give them the answers first.”(SCP)
“You feel like you’re working against the system, not with the system. You feel that every thing is incentivising you to do the exact opposite […] You have to find all the motivation from within yourself […] forget giving you motivation, there are like disincentives every where.”(UWP)
“I mean the system is broken for a reason right, so we need to figure out why…”(SWP)
“It will end up in a dump here.”(SCP)
“The garbage truck comes here, they put everything together… so you can see that there is no point in making an effort to segregate.”(SCP)
“We would sometimes separate, but I think the council always ends up putting it all to gether in the truck, and even when […] they separately pick up but, [it] could all end up in the same landfill.”(SWP)
“It’s scary like, the way [waste pollution is] going to end up now is already bad it’s, if it gets any worse I don’t know.”(UCP)
5. Discussion
5.1. Relationships between Perceptions and Motivations for Waste Management Behaviours
5.2. Perceptions and Motivations in Waste Communication
5.3. Practical Implications of This Study
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Location | Participants | Women | Men |
---|---|---|---|
Urban Western Province/Colombo (UWP) | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Suburban Western Province (SWP) | 5 | 4 | 1 |
Rural Western Province (RWP) | 4 | 3 | 1 |
Urban Central Province/Kandy (UCP) | 4 | 1 | 3 |
Suburban Central Province (SCP) | 5 | 3 | 2 |
Rural Central Province (RCP) | 4 | 4 | 0 |
Total | 23 | 15 | 8 |
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Gudmann Knutsson, S.; Asplund, T.; Höst, G.; Schönborn, K.J. Public Perceptions of Waste Management in Sri Lanka: A Focus Group Study. Sustainability 2021, 13, 12960. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132312960
Gudmann Knutsson S, Asplund T, Höst G, Schönborn KJ. Public Perceptions of Waste Management in Sri Lanka: A Focus Group Study. Sustainability. 2021; 13(23):12960. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132312960
Chicago/Turabian StyleGudmann Knutsson, Sophie, Therese Asplund, Gunnar Höst, and Konrad J. Schönborn. 2021. "Public Perceptions of Waste Management in Sri Lanka: A Focus Group Study" Sustainability 13, no. 23: 12960. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132312960
APA StyleGudmann Knutsson, S., Asplund, T., Höst, G., & Schönborn, K. J. (2021). Public Perceptions of Waste Management in Sri Lanka: A Focus Group Study. Sustainability, 13(23), 12960. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132312960