Subtopic Deep Dive

Household Waste Management Strategies
Research Guide

What is Household Waste Management Strategies?

Household Waste Management Strategies encompass methods for source segregation, composting, pay-as-you-throw systems, and community interventions at residential scales to reduce waste generation and enhance recycling.

Research focuses on behavioral interventions, composting models, and integrated sustainable waste management (ISWM) in urban and rural settings. Over 20 papers from 2009-2022 analyze participation rates and compost performance, with key studies from Indonesia, Iran, and Thailand. Citation leaders include Kumar et al. (2009, 28 citations) on compost models and Sabarinah (2017, 36 citations) on waste-sorting knowledge.

15
Curated Papers
3
Key Challenges

Why It Matters

Household strategies reduce landfill use by 20-50% through source separation and composting, as shown in Premakumara et al. (2011) ISWM implementation in Surabaya. Community programs boost sorting participation via education, per Sabarinah (2017) and Ruliana et al. (2019). Co-composting recovers nutrients from organic waste, enabling soil amendment in developing cities (Cofie et al., 2016; Jalalipour et al., 2020).

Key Research Challenges

Low Household Participation

Residents often fail to sort waste due to limited knowledge and habits, with only 30% engaging in recycling programs (Sabarinah, 2017). Studies in Indonesia show weak correlations between awareness and action (Ruliana et al., 2019; Maulina, 2012). Interventions require behavioral economics to sustain compliance.

Compost Quality Variability

Urban organic waste composting yields inconsistent nutrient recovery due to contamination and process inefficiencies (Kumar et al., 2009). Co-composting with sludge improves value but risks pathogens (Cofie et al., 2016). Models need optimization for household scales (Jalalipour et al., 2020).

Scalability in Developing Cities

ISWM practices face infrastructure gaps in highland or tourist areas, limiting waste reduction (Premakumara et al., 2011; Pasukphun et al., 2019). Tehran’s windrow composting struggles with volume from 22 districts (Rupani et al., 2019). GIS mapping and policy enforcement are essential for expansion.

Essential Papers

1.

Co-composting of solid waste and fecal sludge for nutrient and organic matter recovery

Olufunke Cofie, Josiane Nikiema, Robert Impraim et al. · 2016 · 52 citations

Biological treatment, composting, in particular, is a relatively simple, durable and inexpensive alternative for stabilizing and reducing biodegradable waste. Co-composting of different waste sourc...

2.

Composting and Anaerobic Digestion of Food Waste and Sewage Sludge for Campus Sustainability: A Review

Abu Zahrim Yaser, Junidah Lamaming, Emma Suali et al. · 2022 · International Journal of Chemical Engineering · 39 citations

Composting and anaerobic digestion have emerged as better options for managing food waste and sewage sludge at the campus level. This review highlights the characteristics of food waste and sewage ...

3.

Current Scenario of the Tehran Municipal Solid Waste Handling Rules towards Green Technology

Parveen Fatemeh Rupani, Reza Maleki Delarestaghi, Hossein Asadi et al. · 2019 · International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health · 38 citations

This study aims to study the waste management process and recycling of municipal waste in Tehran. Currently, Kahrizak is the defined landfill area which collects the waste generated from 22 distric...

4.

The Importance of Waste Management Knowledge to Encourage Household Waste-Sorting Behaviour in Indonesia

Zakianis Sabarinah · 2017 · International Journal of Waste Resources · 36 citations

Waste sorting behavior in Indonesia is still low and becomes the reason of the government policy enactment about recycling programme through waste bank which unfortunately only 30% of it works regu...

5.

Potential of Producing Compost from Source-Separated Municipal Organic Waste (A Case Study in Shiraz, Iran)

Haniyeh Jalalipour, Neematollah Jaafarzadeh, Gert Morscheck et al. · 2020 · Sustainability · 29 citations

Developing countries face serious environmental, social and economic challenges in managing different types of organic waste. Proper treatment strategies should be adopted by solid waste management...

6.

Assessment of the performance of different compost models to manage urban household organic solid wastes

Pradeep Kumar, Ambika Jayaram, R. Somashekar · 2009 · Clean Technologies and Environmental Policy · 28 citations

7.

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...

Reading Guide

Foundational Papers

Start with Kumar et al. (2009) for compost model benchmarks (28 citations), Maulina (2012) for participation factors, and Premakumara et al. (2011) for ISWM frameworks.

Recent Advances

Study Yaser et al. (2022) on anaerobic digestion reviews (39 citations), Rupani et al. (2019) on Tehran rules (38 citations), and Jalalipour et al. (2020) on source-separated compost.

Core Methods

Core techniques: source segregation (Sabarinah, 2017), co-composting (Cofie et al., 2016), windrow processing (Rupani et al., 2019), and 3Rs-ISWM (Premakumara et al., 2011).

How PapersFlow Helps You Research Household Waste Management Strategies

Discover & Search

Research Agent uses searchPapers with 'household composting Indonesia' to find Sabarinah (2017), then citationGraph reveals 10+ related works like Ruliana et al. (2019), and findSimilarPapers expands to exaSearch for behavioral studies in Asia.

Analyze & Verify

Analysis Agent applies readPaperContent on Cofie et al. (2016) to extract co-composting nutrient data, verifyResponse with CoVe checks claims against Jalalipour et al. (2020), and runPythonAnalysis plots participation rates from Kumar et al. (2009) using pandas for GRADE A evidence grading on model performance.

Synthesize & Write

Synthesis Agent detects gaps in scalable ISWM beyond Premakumara et al. (2011), flags contradictions in sorting efficacy between Maulina (2012) and Sabarinah (2017); Writing Agent uses latexEditText for strategy reviews, latexSyncCitations for 20-paper bibliographies, and latexCompile for publication-ready reports with exportMermaid diagrams of waste flows.

Use Cases

"Analyze compost participation data from Indonesian household studies"

Research Agent → searchPapers 'compost household Indonesia' → Analysis Agent → runPythonAnalysis (pandas aggregation of rates from Sabarinah 2017, Ruliana 2019) → matplotlib plot of trends with statistical verification.

"Draft review on co-composting strategies with citations"

Synthesis Agent → gap detection in Cofie 2016 vs Yaser 2022 → Writing Agent → latexEditText for intro, latexSyncCitations for 15 papers, latexCompile → PDF with ISWM flowchart via exportMermaid.

"Find code for GIS waste mapping in household studies"

Research Agent → paperExtractUrls on Rupani 2019 → Code Discovery → paperFindGithubRepo → githubRepoInspect → Python scripts for Tehran waste composition analysis.

Automated Workflows

Deep Research workflow conducts systematic review: searchPapers 50+ on 'household waste segregation Asia' → DeepScan 7-steps analyzes composting metrics from Kumar 2009 with CoVe checkpoints → structured report on participation factors. Theorizer generates theory on behavioral drivers from Sabarinah 2017 + Maulina 2012 data chains.

Frequently Asked Questions

What defines household waste management strategies?

Strategies include source segregation, composting, and ISWM at residential levels to cut landfill waste (Premakumara et al., 2011).

What methods improve household sorting?

Education boosts knowledge-behavior links, as in waste bank programs reaching 30% participation (Sabarinah, 2017; Ruliana et al., 2019).

Which are key papers?

Foundational: Kumar et al. (2009, 28 citations) on compost models; recent: Yaser et al. (2022, 39 citations) on campus food waste digestion.

What open problems exist?

Scalable co-composting without contamination and enforcing pay-as-you-throw in tourist areas remain unresolved (Cofie et al., 2016; Pasukphun et al., 2019).

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