Rubbish Belongs to the Poor

Regular price €25.99
Title
A01=Patrick O'Hare
Author_Patrick O'Hare
capitalism and waste
Category=JHMC
Category=KCSA
Category=RNH
commons
dumpster diving
enclosure
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
evictions in south america
land disposession
Latin America
life in south america
privatisation in south america
recycling
rubbish
south american workers
the commons
Uruguay
Waste
waste disposal
Waste Management
waste-pickers
workers in Uruguay

Product details

  • ISBN 9780745341408
  • Weight: 246g
  • Dimensions: 135 x 215mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Feb 2022
  • Publisher: Pluto Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Rubbish. Waste. Trash. Whatever term you choose to describe the things we throw away, the connotations are the same; of something dirty, useless and incontrovertibly 'bad'. But does such a dismissive rendering mask a more nuanced reality?

In Rubbish Belongs to the Poor, Patrick O'Hare journeys to the heart of Uruguay's waste disposal system in order to reconceptualize rubbish as a 21st century commons, at risk of enclosure. On a giant landfill site outside the capital Montevideo we meet the book's central protagonists, the 'classifiers': waste-pickers who recover and recycle materials in and around its fenced but porous perimeter. Here the struggle of classifiers against the enclosure of the landfill, justified on the grounds of hygiene, is brought into dialogue with other historical and contemporary enclosures - from urban privatizations to rural evictions - to shed light on the nature of contemporary forms of capitalist dispossession.

Supplementing this rich ethnography with the author's own insights from dumpster diving in the UK, the book analyses capitalism's relations with its material surpluses and what these tell us about its expansionary logics, limits and liminal spaces. Rubbish Belongs to the Poor ultimately proposes a fundamental rethinking of the links between waste, capitalism and dignified work.

Patrick O'Hare is a social anthropologist and activist. He completed his PhD at the University of Cambridge and is currently a UKRI Future Leaders Fellow and Senior Researcher at the University of St Andrews.