Stakeholder participation and engagement in the governance of waste in Wolkite, Ethiopia

Using exploratory case-study, this study sought to explore the institutional and structural components of stakeholders’ participation in the governance of waste in Wolkite Town. It helps to understand the potential and power of stakeholders through establishing autonomous multi-level governance regi...

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Main Author: Wassihun Gebreegizaber Woldesenbet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-04-01
Series:Environmental Challenges
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667010021000135
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spelling doaj-08b399ceb15042e59967de599ab164ab2021-07-08T04:05:06ZengElsevierEnvironmental Challenges2667-01002021-04-013100034Stakeholder participation and engagement in the governance of waste in Wolkite, EthiopiaWassihun Gebreegizaber Woldesenbet0Wolkite University, 07, EthiopiaUsing exploratory case-study, this study sought to explore the institutional and structural components of stakeholders’ participation in the governance of waste in Wolkite Town. It helps to understand the potential and power of stakeholders through establishing autonomous multi-level governance regimes. The study revealed that the top-down and provincial nature of waste governance in Wolkite town is fragile and collapses with limited outcomes, for stakeholders do not take responsibility and accountability that governs and encourages their engagement. Rather, their engagement is limited to working based on government initiatives that do not encourage multi-scale governance programs which could make waste governance broad in content by combining the commercial, health, social, and environmental stakes of stakeholders. The stakeholders are not aware of the impact of their power and how waste cold be governed according to the distinct institutional structures instead of following uniform approaches.Hence, it is imperative to institute different governance centers that have the power and responsibility to organize and transform waste governance practices.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667010021000135StakeholdersParticipationCollaborative governanceWasteUrban centers
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wassihun Gebreegizaber Woldesenbet
spellingShingle Wassihun Gebreegizaber Woldesenbet
Stakeholder participation and engagement in the governance of waste in Wolkite, Ethiopia
Environmental Challenges
Stakeholders
Participation
Collaborative governance
Waste
Urban centers
author_facet Wassihun Gebreegizaber Woldesenbet
author_sort Wassihun Gebreegizaber Woldesenbet
title Stakeholder participation and engagement in the governance of waste in Wolkite, Ethiopia
title_short Stakeholder participation and engagement in the governance of waste in Wolkite, Ethiopia
title_full Stakeholder participation and engagement in the governance of waste in Wolkite, Ethiopia
title_fullStr Stakeholder participation and engagement in the governance of waste in Wolkite, Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Stakeholder participation and engagement in the governance of waste in Wolkite, Ethiopia
title_sort stakeholder participation and engagement in the governance of waste in wolkite, ethiopia
publisher Elsevier
series Environmental Challenges
issn 2667-0100
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Using exploratory case-study, this study sought to explore the institutional and structural components of stakeholders’ participation in the governance of waste in Wolkite Town. It helps to understand the potential and power of stakeholders through establishing autonomous multi-level governance regimes. The study revealed that the top-down and provincial nature of waste governance in Wolkite town is fragile and collapses with limited outcomes, for stakeholders do not take responsibility and accountability that governs and encourages their engagement. Rather, their engagement is limited to working based on government initiatives that do not encourage multi-scale governance programs which could make waste governance broad in content by combining the commercial, health, social, and environmental stakes of stakeholders. The stakeholders are not aware of the impact of their power and how waste cold be governed according to the distinct institutional structures instead of following uniform approaches.Hence, it is imperative to institute different governance centers that have the power and responsibility to organize and transform waste governance practices.
topic Stakeholders
Participation
Collaborative governance
Waste
Urban centers
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667010021000135
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