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- Inclusive Recycling in Waste Picker Cooperatives in Brazil . . . - WIEGO
From February to July 2020 in Brazil, state and municipal restrictions prohibited activities deemed non-essential, for example the operations of catador cooperatives, but also sorting warehouses for intermediary buyers of recyclable materials and recycling companies
- Challenges and opportunities for waste picker cooperatives . . . - Springer
In Brazil, the waste picker cooperatives are mainly responsible for the steps that contribute to the reverse logistics proposed by the NPSW in terms of door-to-door collection, transport, sorting and pre-processing of recyclable materials [4]
- (PDF) Waste Policy and Inclusion of Recyclers in Brazil
This study analyzes the integration of recycling cooperatives in the formal management of municipal solid waste with recyclable potential (MSWRP) of a medium-sized municipality in Brazil, with the objective of ascertaining the contributions of cooperatives in an adapted CE structure and, at the same time, identifying a cooperative that can be
- Issue Series 1 Extended Producers Responsibility and Inclusion: Brazil . . .
It is hoped that the social mobilization of waste pickers and their supporters are able to push inclusivity forward in spite of the anti-democratic nature of Brazil’s current government
- Waste pickers and their inclusion in Brazilian public . . . - Brasil
In Brazil, around 800,000 waste pickers working are female, acting on the streets and dumps In 2020, there were about 1,700 cooperatives and associations organized throughout the country, sharing the resulting from the sale of recyclables among its members (Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung, 2020)
- The Governance of “Social Arrangements for Material . . . - Springer
In Brazil, the National Policy for Solid Waste (PNRS) recognizes the activity of the collectors of recyclable materials, having included in its objectives and encouraging the creation and development of cooperatives or other types of association for the purpose of promoting social inclusion and economic improvement for these workers
- Redesol - Building sustainable and solidary links among waste pickers . . .
The establishment of sustainable business links in the recycling chain has been a dream pursued for waste pickers in the informal economy in Brazil Since the early 1990’s waste pickers have been organizing themselves into cooperatives and other solidarity based associations
- Legal Recognition of Waste Pickers Brazil - globalrec. org
Background The catadores social protection over the last 20 years Data collected by Brazil’s oficial statistical system show that over 281,000 waste pickers are engaged in collecting recyclables in Brazil, either operating individually or coll
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