IS THE CONCEPT OF WASTE UNIVERSAL? HANDLING BUILDING DEMOLITION BY-PRODUCTS IN THE CITY OF KANO, NIGERIA

While old and new studies such as the works of Henry Lewis Morgan in 1871 on kinship and Geert Hofstede in 1980 on management theories show that what works in one cultural setting may not work in another, the United Nation policies on environmental governance to-date tend to be a uniform approach f...

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Main Authors: Aminu Lawan ABDULLAHI, Angela LEE
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UJ Press 2018-06-01
Series:Journal of Construction Project Management and Innovation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/JCPMI/article/view/157
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author Aminu Lawan ABDULLAHI
Angela LEE
author_facet Aminu Lawan ABDULLAHI
Angela LEE
author_sort Aminu Lawan ABDULLAHI
collection DOAJ
description While old and new studies such as the works of Henry Lewis Morgan in 1871 on kinship and Geert Hofstede in 1980 on management theories show that what works in one cultural setting may not work in another, the United Nation policies on environmental governance to-date tend to be a uniform approach for all nations irrespective of the differences in cultural orientation. This paper investigates and demonstrates that in the context of construction and demolition wastes, what may be considered as waste in one society may be a wealth in another society; and the waste management policies that work in one society may not work in another. Therefore the one-way traffic approach in international environmental governance whereby the waste management practices of the rich countries are considered as a perfect model to be emulated by the poorer countries may be wrong. In some instance, such as the building demolition management practices in Nigeria, the systems of the developing countries may even be more sustainable than what is obtainable in the rich countries. Instead of dismissing the systems of the developing countries as informal and inferior, such systems may be holding the key to the sustainable solutions for waste management that the world needs so much.
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spelling doaj-art-904f1859c57d48df99f6b8c329d2a0182025-01-08T06:10:49ZengUJ PressJournal of Construction Project Management and Innovation2223-78522959-96522018-06-018110.36615/jcpmi.v8i1.157IS THE CONCEPT OF WASTE UNIVERSAL? HANDLING BUILDING DEMOLITION BY-PRODUCTS IN THE CITY OF KANO, NIGERIAAminu Lawan ABDULLAHI0Angela LEE1Department of Architecture, Kano State University of Science and Technology (KUST), Kano, NigeriaSchool of The Built Environment, University of Salford, Salford, United Kingdom While old and new studies such as the works of Henry Lewis Morgan in 1871 on kinship and Geert Hofstede in 1980 on management theories show that what works in one cultural setting may not work in another, the United Nation policies on environmental governance to-date tend to be a uniform approach for all nations irrespective of the differences in cultural orientation. This paper investigates and demonstrates that in the context of construction and demolition wastes, what may be considered as waste in one society may be a wealth in another society; and the waste management policies that work in one society may not work in another. Therefore the one-way traffic approach in international environmental governance whereby the waste management practices of the rich countries are considered as a perfect model to be emulated by the poorer countries may be wrong. In some instance, such as the building demolition management practices in Nigeria, the systems of the developing countries may even be more sustainable than what is obtainable in the rich countries. Instead of dismissing the systems of the developing countries as informal and inferior, such systems may be holding the key to the sustainable solutions for waste management that the world needs so much. https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/JCPMI/article/view/157Building, Demolition, Waste, Nigeria, Sustainability
spellingShingle Aminu Lawan ABDULLAHI
Angela LEE
IS THE CONCEPT OF WASTE UNIVERSAL? HANDLING BUILDING DEMOLITION BY-PRODUCTS IN THE CITY OF KANO, NIGERIA
Journal of Construction Project Management and Innovation
Building, Demolition, Waste, Nigeria, Sustainability
title IS THE CONCEPT OF WASTE UNIVERSAL? HANDLING BUILDING DEMOLITION BY-PRODUCTS IN THE CITY OF KANO, NIGERIA
title_full IS THE CONCEPT OF WASTE UNIVERSAL? HANDLING BUILDING DEMOLITION BY-PRODUCTS IN THE CITY OF KANO, NIGERIA
title_fullStr IS THE CONCEPT OF WASTE UNIVERSAL? HANDLING BUILDING DEMOLITION BY-PRODUCTS IN THE CITY OF KANO, NIGERIA
title_full_unstemmed IS THE CONCEPT OF WASTE UNIVERSAL? HANDLING BUILDING DEMOLITION BY-PRODUCTS IN THE CITY OF KANO, NIGERIA
title_short IS THE CONCEPT OF WASTE UNIVERSAL? HANDLING BUILDING DEMOLITION BY-PRODUCTS IN THE CITY OF KANO, NIGERIA
title_sort is the concept of waste universal handling building demolition by products in the city of kano nigeria
topic Building, Demolition, Waste, Nigeria, Sustainability
url https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/JCPMI/article/view/157
work_keys_str_mv AT aminulawanabdullahi istheconceptofwasteuniversalhandlingbuildingdemolitionbyproductsinthecityofkanonigeria
AT angelalee istheconceptofwasteuniversalhandlingbuildingdemolitionbyproductsinthecityofkanonigeria