Includes bibliographyWaste management is one of the least recognized public policy issues in the Caribbean. Quite apart from the obvious physical unattractiveness of the business, waste management often competes with more pressing economic and social issues such as fiscal and trade matters, unemployment and poverty, education and health, and crime and security. Even within the domain of environmental sustainability, the management of waste has had to play second fiddle to more apparently manifest challenges such as land and coastal degradation, biodiversity loss, and climate change. Waste management, however, remains a major challenge for any society, since all natural processes generate waste. The particular economic, social and environmen...
Solid Waste Management in Costa Rica and the United States: a Comparative Analysis of Five Municipal...
This paper focuses on municipal solid waste generated in remote areas and examines alternative optio...
Island systems have limited geographical, ecological, and social capacity to metabolize waste materi...
The Wider Caribbean Region does not have a regional waste management strategy. An integrated approac...
The protection of public health is the basis behind any waste management system while its sophistica...
Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) management is an essential service for an urban population to maintain s...
In 1999, despite having the only municipal incinerator in the insular Commonwealth Caribbean, substa...
Three waste reduction strategies were studied by a survey in the St. Ann’s Parish located in the sma...
Waste accumulation is an issue of particular concern in many Caribbean cities and communities. The l...
Waste remains a serious environmental and human health hazard in developing nations, including those...
A key issue addressed at the February 2003 meeting was the management of solid wastes, focusing on t...
Waste management is particularly challenging for Small Island Developing States (SIDS) due to their ...
Solid waste is a global issue. As developing countries strive to improve their economic situations a...
Erworben im Rahmen der Schweizer Nationallizenzen (http://www.nationallizenzen.ch)Solid waste manage...
Municipal solid waste (MSW) management has been a challenging issue throughout history. Waste manage...
Solid Waste Management in Costa Rica and the United States: a Comparative Analysis of Five Municipal...
This paper focuses on municipal solid waste generated in remote areas and examines alternative optio...
Island systems have limited geographical, ecological, and social capacity to metabolize waste materi...
The Wider Caribbean Region does not have a regional waste management strategy. An integrated approac...
The protection of public health is the basis behind any waste management system while its sophistica...
Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) management is an essential service for an urban population to maintain s...
In 1999, despite having the only municipal incinerator in the insular Commonwealth Caribbean, substa...
Three waste reduction strategies were studied by a survey in the St. Ann’s Parish located in the sma...
Waste accumulation is an issue of particular concern in many Caribbean cities and communities. The l...
Waste remains a serious environmental and human health hazard in developing nations, including those...
A key issue addressed at the February 2003 meeting was the management of solid wastes, focusing on t...
Waste management is particularly challenging for Small Island Developing States (SIDS) due to their ...
Solid waste is a global issue. As developing countries strive to improve their economic situations a...
Erworben im Rahmen der Schweizer Nationallizenzen (http://www.nationallizenzen.ch)Solid waste manage...
Municipal solid waste (MSW) management has been a challenging issue throughout history. Waste manage...
Solid Waste Management in Costa Rica and the United States: a Comparative Analysis of Five Municipal...
This paper focuses on municipal solid waste generated in remote areas and examines alternative optio...
Island systems have limited geographical, ecological, and social capacity to metabolize waste materi...