Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Doing the ‘Dirty Work’ of the Green Economy: resource recovery and migrant labour in the EU

Gregson, N.; Crang, M.; Botticello, J.; Calestani, M.; Krzywoszynska, A.

Doing the ‘Dirty Work’ of the Green Economy: resource recovery and migrant labour in the EU Thumbnail


Authors

J. Botticello

M. Calestani

A. Krzywoszynska



Abstract

Europe has set out its plans to foster a ‘green economy’, focused around recycling, by 2020. This pan-European recycling economy, it is argued, will have the triple virtues of: first, stopping wastes being ‘dumped’ on poor countries; second, reusing them and thus decoupling economic prosperity from demands on global resources; and third, creating a wave of employment in recycling industries. European resource recovery is represented in academic and practitioner literatures as ‘clean and green’. Underpinned by a technical and physical materialism, it highlights the clean-up of Europe’s waste management and the high-tech character of resource recovery. Analysis shows this representation to mask the cultural and physical associations between recycling work and waste work, and thus to obscure that resource recovery is mostly ‘dirty’ work. Through an empirical analysis of three sectors of resource recovery (‘dry recyclables’, textiles and ships) in Northern member states, we show that resource recovery is a new form of dirty work, located in secondary labour markets and reliant on itinerant and migrant labour, often from accession states. We show therefore that, when wastes stay put within the EU, labour moves to process them. At the micro scale of localities and workplaces, the reluctance of local labour to work in this new sector is shown to connect with embodied knowledge of old manufacturing industries and a sense of spatial injustice. Alongside that, the positioning of migrant workers is shown to rely on stereotypical assumptions that create a hierarchy, connecting reputational qualities of labour with the stigmas of different dirty jobs – a hierarchy upon which those workers at the apex can play.

Citation

Gregson, N., Crang, M., Botticello, J., Calestani, M., & Krzywoszynska, A. (2016). Doing the ‘Dirty Work’ of the Green Economy: resource recovery and migrant labour in the EU. European Urban and Regional Studies, 24(3), 541-555. https://doi.org/10.1177/0969776414554489

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Oct 30, 2014
Publication Date Oct 1, 2016
Deposit Date Sep 2, 2014
Publicly Available Date Oct 27, 2014
Journal European Urban and Regional Studies
Print ISSN 0969-7764
Electronic ISSN 1461-7145
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 24
Issue 3
Pages 541-555
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/0969776414554489
Keywords EU, Labour, Municipal waste, Recycling, Ship recycling, Textile recycling.
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1424248

Files



Accepted Journal Article (412 Kb)
PDF

Copyright Statement
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY 3.0). You are free to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and remix, transform, and build upon the material
for any purpose, even commercially.






You might also like



Downloadable Citations