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Improving Municipal Solid Waste Management in India : A Sourcebook for Policy Makers and Practitioners

Author

Listed:
  • Da Zhu
  • P. U. Asnani
  • Chris Zurbrügg
  • Sebastian Anapolsky
  • Shyamala Mani

Abstract

Human activities create waste, and the ways that waste is handled, stored, collected, and disposed of can pose risks to the environment and to public health. Solid waste management (SWM) includes all activities that seek to minimize health, environmental, and aesthetic impacts of solid waste. In urban areas, especially in the rapidly urbanizing cities of the developing world, problems and issues of municipal solid waste management (MSWM) are of immediate importance. This book addresses the problem by focusing on India. A country such as India, with its high economic growth and rapid urbanization, requires immediate solutions to the problems related to mismanagement of urban waste. City managers are actively trying to understand the problem and are seeking effective ways of intervening. They realize that such interventions are essential to improving the quality of their cities and to reducing adverse health and environmental impacts. For cities to be sustainable and to continue their economic development, they must be clean and healthy. They need to improve their SWM systems by adopting good collection coverage, appropriate transfer methods, and healthy disposal practices.

Suggested Citation

  • Da Zhu & P. U. Asnani & Chris Zurbrügg & Sebastian Anapolsky & Shyamala Mani, 2008. "Improving Municipal Solid Waste Management in India : A Sourcebook for Policy Makers and Practitioners," World Bank Publications - Books, The World Bank Group, number 6916.
  • Handle: RePEc:wbk:wbpubs:6916
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    Download full text from publisher

    File URL: https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/bitstream/handle/10986/6916/425660PUB0Wast12732601OFFICIAL0USE1.pdf?sequence=1
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Sameer Prasad & Ashish Jain & Jasmine Tata & Shantha Parthan, 2012. "From Rags to Riches: Tapping the Social Capital within the Solid Waste Informal Sector," South Asian Journal of Business and Management Cases, , vol. 1(2), pages 77-89, December.
    2. Korai, Muhammad Safar & Mahar, Rasool Bux & Uqaili, Muhammad Aslam, 2017. "The feasibility of municipal solid waste for energy generation and its existing management practices in Pakistan," Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, Elsevier, vol. 72(C), pages 338-353.
    3. Aman Luthra, 2020. "Efficiency in waste collection markets: Changing relationships between firms, informal workers, and the state in urban India," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 52(7), pages 1375-1394, October.
    4. Samuel Yaw Lissah & Martin Amogre Ayanore & John K. Krugu & Matilda Aberese-Ako & Robert A. C. Ruiter, 2022. "“Our Work, Our Health, No One’s Concern”: Domestic Waste Collectors’ Perceptions of Occupational Safety and Self-Reported Health Issues in an Urban Town in Ghana," IJERPH, MDPI, vol. 19(11), pages 1-18, May.
    5. Christian Zurbrügg & Marco Caniato & Mentore Vaccari, 2014. "How Assessment Methods Can Support Solid Waste Management in Developing Countries—A Critical Review," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 6(2), pages 1-26, January.
    6. S. R. Parthan & M. W. Milke & I. Sheerin, 2019. "Solid Waste Management Cost Function Analysis in Industrialising Cities: Lessons from the Healthcare Sector," Journal of Development Policy and Practice, , vol. 4(2), pages 145-165, July.
    7. Kiran Sandhu & Paul Burton & Aysin Dedekorkut-Howes, 2016. "A Comprehensive Sustainability Assessment Framework for Ex-Post Evaluation of Private Sector Participation in Municipal Solid Waste Management," Journal of Environmental Assessment Policy and Management (JEAPM), World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd., vol. 18(01), pages 1-27, March.
    8. Glenn Baxter & Panarat Srisaeng & Graham Wild, 2018. "An Assessment of Airport Sustainability, Part 1—Waste Management at Copenhagen Airport," Resources, MDPI, vol. 7(1), pages 1-24, March.

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