Subtopic Deep Dive
Community Participation in Waste Reduction
Research Guide
What is Community Participation in Waste Reduction?
Community Participation in Waste Reduction refers to community-driven initiatives, such as waste banks and 4R programs (reduce, reuse, recycle, replant), that empower local residents to manage household waste and enhance recycling rates in urban areas of developing countries.
This subtopic examines case studies from Indonesia, including waste banks in Tasikmalaya (Asteria and Heruman, 2016, 123 citations) and Kepanjen (Purba et al., 2013, 63 citations). Research highlights participatory governance and education to shift behaviors toward sustainable waste practices. Over 10 key papers from 2011-2021 analyze effectiveness in reducing landfill dependency.
Why It Matters
Community participation models like waste banks in Tasikmalaya reduced waste volumes through resident-led sorting and sales (Asteria and Heruman, 2016). In Pekanbaru, governance involving households improved solid waste separation compliance (Zainal et al., 2021). These bottom-up approaches in developing cities like Surabaya foster long-term recycling rates, easing landfill pressures amid population growth (Premakumara et al., 2011). Women's roles in waste banks further amplify local sustainability impacts (Asteria and Herdiansyah, 2020).
Key Research Challenges
Low Community Awareness
Residents often lack knowledge of waste separation, leading to low participation rates, as seen in Morogoro where improper disposal posed health risks (Chengula et al., 2015). Surveys in Depok showed weak correlations between information exposure and practice (Ruliana et al., 2019). Interventions require sustained education to build attitudes.
Landfill Capacity Limits
Rapid urbanization overwhelms landfills, prompting waste bank alternatives in Kepanjen (Purba et al., 2013). Semarang's community systems aim to divert waste but face scalability issues (Tyas et al., 2013). Governance gaps hinder uniform implementation across districts.
Sustaining Participation
Initial engagement fades without economic incentives, evident in Tasikmalaya's waste banks needing ongoing education (Asteria and Heruman, 2016). Women's groups show promise but require policy support (Asteria and Herdiansyah, 2020). Monitoring household separation remains inconsistent (Zakianis et al., 2018).
Essential Papers
BANK SAMPAH SEBAGAI ALTERNATIF STRATEGI PENGELOLAAN SAMPAH BERBASIS MASYARAKAT DI TASIKMALAYA (Bank Sampah (Waste Banks) as an Alternative of Community-Based Waste Management Strategy in Tasikmalaya)
Donna Asteria, Heru Heruman · 2016 · Jurnal Manusia dan Lingkungan · 123 citations
ABSTRAK Perubahan paradigma masyarakat mengenai sampah perlu dilakukan secara berkelanjutan. Edukasi kesadaraan dan keterampilan warga untuk pengelolaan sampah dengan penerapan prinsip reduce, reus...
Waste Management Scenario through Community Based Waste Bank: A Case Study of Kepanjen District, Malang Regency, Indonesia
Hasfarm D. Purba, Christia Meidiana, Dimas W. Adrianto · 2013 · International Journal of Environmental Science and Development · 63 citations
The population growth in Kepanjen District leads to the waste volume increase.Due to the fact that the landfill in this area is approaching its maximum capacity, the local government needs to find ...
Governance of Household Waste Management in Pekanbaru City
Zainal Zainal, Riri Riantika Rambey, Khairul Rahman · 2021 · MIMBAR Jurnal Sosial dan Pembangunan · 46 citations
Empirically, a background of this research is that waste is still a serious problem in Pekanbaru City. This study aims to profoundly examine the Governance of Waste Management in Pekanbaru City. Th...
Assessing the Awareness, Knowledge, Attitude and Practice of the Community towards Solid Waste Disposal and Identifying the Threats and Extent of Bacteria in the Solid Waste Disposal Sites in Morogoro Municipality in Tanzania
Augustino A. Chengula, Bahati K Lucas, Alexanda Mzula · 2015 · VNU Journal of Science: Natural Sciences and Technology (Vietnam National University) · 26 citations
Solid wastes comprise all the wastes arising from human and animal activities that are normally solid, discarded \nas useless or unwanted materials. Health hazards associated with improper disp...
Assessing a community-based waste separation program through examination of correlations between participation, information exposure, environmental knowledge, and environmental attitude
Vita Ruliana, Roekmijati Widaningroem Soemantojo, Donna Asteria · 2019 · ASEAN Journal of Community Engagement · 22 citations
Municipal solid waste has become one of major environmental issues and pollution sources. In cities of developing countries, the amount of waste is inversely proportional to the land area available...
The role of women in managing waste banks and supporting waste management in local communities
Donna Asteria, Herdis Herdiansyah · 2020 · Community Development Journal · 20 citations
Abstract This paper aims to describe women’s role with active participation in waste management within their communities. The environmental awareness education of citizens combined with the applica...
Reducing municipal waste through promoting integrated sustainable waste management (ISWM) practices in Surabaya city, Indonesia
Dickella Gamaralalage Jagath Premakumara, Masato Abé, Toshizo Maeda · 2011 · WIT transactions on ecology and the environment · 20 citations
Solid waste management is considered to be one of the most serious environmental issues confronting urban areas in developing countries.In keeping with global trends, many cities are focused on int...
Reading Guide
Foundational Papers
Start with Purba et al. (2013, 63 citations) for waste bank mechanics in Kepanjen, then Premakumara et al. (2011, 20 citations) for 3R integration in Surabaya to grasp early models.
Recent Advances
Study Asteria and Herdiansyah (2020) on women's roles and Zainal et al. (2021) on Pekanbaru governance for current governance advances.
Core Methods
Core techniques include qualitative case studies, household surveys for awareness-attitude correlations (Ruliana et al., 2019), and participatory action research in waste banks (Asteria and Heruman, 2016).
How PapersFlow Helps You Research Community Participation in Waste Reduction
Discover & Search
Research Agent uses searchPapers and exaSearch to query 'waste banks Indonesia community participation' yielding Asteria and Heruman (2016) as top result with 123 citations. citationGraph reveals clusters around Tasikmalaya and Kepanjen cases; findSimilarPapers links to Purba et al. (2013) for comparative studies.
Analyze & Verify
Analysis Agent applies readPaperContent to extract 4R implementation details from Asteria and Heruman (2016), then verifyResponse with CoVe checks claims against Purba et al. (2013). runPythonAnalysis processes citation networks or participation rates from abstracts using pandas for statistical verification; GRADE assigns evidence levels to qualitative case studies.
Synthesize & Write
Synthesis Agent detects gaps like scalability beyond Indonesia via contradiction flagging between Zainal et al. (2021) and older models. Writing Agent uses latexEditText for case study sections, latexSyncCitations to integrate 10+ papers, latexCompile for full reports, and exportMermaid for participation workflow diagrams.
Use Cases
"Analyze participation rates in Indonesian waste banks from 2013-2020 papers"
Research Agent → searchPapers → Analysis Agent → runPythonAnalysis (pandas aggregation of rates from Purba et al. 2013 and Asteria 2016) → CSV export of stats summary.
"Write a review on waste bank governance citing Asteria 2016 and Zainal 2021"
Research Agent → citationGraph → Synthesis Agent → gap detection → Writing Agent → latexEditText + latexSyncCitations + latexCompile → PDF with formatted citations.
"Find code or models for simulating community waste reduction programs"
Research Agent → paperExtractUrls → Code Discovery → paperFindGithubRepo (linked to ISWM models) → githubRepoInspect → Python sandbox verification of simulation scripts.
Automated Workflows
Deep Research workflow conducts systematic review of 50+ Indonesian waste papers, chaining searchPapers → citationGraph → structured report on participation trends. DeepScan applies 7-step analysis to Asteria and Heruman (2016), with CoVe checkpoints verifying 4R impacts. Theorizer generates theory on women's roles from Asteria and Herdiansyah (2020) plus similar papers.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is community participation in waste reduction?
It involves resident-led initiatives like waste banks applying 4R principles to sort and recycle household waste, as in Tasikmalaya (Asteria and Heruman, 2016).
What methods are used in key studies?
Qualitative case studies and surveys assess awareness and governance, such as descriptive analysis in Pekanbaru (Zainal et al., 2021) and correlation exams in Depok (Ruliana et al., 2019).
What are the most cited papers?
Asteria and Heruman (2016) leads with 123 citations on Tasikmalaya waste banks; Purba et al. (2013) follows with 63 on Kepanjen scenarios.
What open problems persist?
Scalability beyond pilots, sustained motivation without incentives, and integration with urban policy, as noted in Surabaya ISWM limits (Premakumara et al., 2011).
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Part of the Waste Management and Recycling Research Guide