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This edited volume takes a comprehensive look at solid waste management across jurisdictions in Canada, including provinces, territories, municipalities and Indigenous communities.



This edited volume takes a comprehensive look at solid waste management across jurisdictions in Canada, including provinces, territories, municipalities and Indigenous communities. It provides the reader with an understanding of various solid waste management approaches, policies, practices, barriers, and innovations that are being pursued and developed by jurisdictions to solve their current challenges and to improve current systems in place. Solid waste management remains one of the most challenging environmental concerns in the 21st Century. Understanding its complexity by bridging theory and practice is essential for current and future management, and for achieving the sustainable development goals. Using a transdisciplinary approach, contributors include social scientists, engineers, economists, scientists, urban planners, and practitioners in the solid waste management field, who utilize qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods in examining solid waste management issues in Canada. Topics include solid waste management policy and governance, community-based approaches to waste management, waste management in northern, remote, rural, and Indigenous communities, landfill management and stabilization, and innovative and emergent waste management. This book is an important resource for researchers, undergraduate and graduate students, policymakers, solid waste management professionals, government officials, and members of the public interested in solid waste management.

About the Editors. List of Contributors. Acknowledgements. Introduction.
PART 1: WASTE MANAGEMENT POLICY AND GOVERNANCE.
1. Moving Up the Waste
Hierarchy: A Canadian Case Study.
2. Municipal Strategies for Zero Waste
Planning.
3. Challenges and Opportunities for Industrial, Commercial and
Institutional (IC&I) Waste Compliance in Nova Scotia.
4. Bridging the Gap:
Communicating Sustainability in Waste Management to Diverse Audiences. PART
2: WASTE MANAGEMENT IN NORTHERN, REMOTE, RURAL, AND INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES.
5. Waste Stewardship in Northern, Remote, Rural and First Nations Communities
in Saskatchewan Challenges and Opportunities.
6. Municipal Solid Waste
Management in Northern Manitoba Municipalities.
7. Municipal Solid Waste
Management in First Nations: Examining Operational Challenges and Solutions.
PART 3: COMMUNITY-BASED WASTE MANAGEMENT APPROACHES.
8. Contribution of Waste
Pickers Grassroots Organizations to Waste Management in Victoria and
Vancouver.
9. Recycling Right: A Multi-stakeholder Perspective from Ontario.
10. Recycling Behaviours and Knowledge in Western Newfoundland: Explanations
and Recommendations. PART 4: LANDFILLS AND INNOVATIVE WASTE MANAGEMENT.
11.
Field Investigation and Numerical Modelling of MSW Settlement in Cold
Regions.
12. Landfill Biocell Technology for Northern Climates: The Calgary
Biocell.
13. Composting As a Promising Alternative for Phosphorus Recovery
from Food Waste: A Case Study of Canadian Solid Waste Management Practices.
14. Analyzing Geospatial Characteristics and Solar Potential of Closed
Landfill Sites in Saskatchewan. PART 5: EMERGING WASTE MANAGEMENT.
15.
Emerging solid wastes and arising environmental impacts.
16. Wind turbine
end-of-life waste management in Nova Scotia, Canada.
17. Enhancing waste
management systems in Canada: Integration of Geographic Information System
and Remote Sensing Approaches. Index.
Anderson Assuah is an associate professor in the Aboriginal and Northern Studies program at the University College of the North (The Pas Campus), Manitoba, Canada.

Kelvin Tsun Wai Ng is Professor of Environmental Systems Engineering at the University of Regina, Canada.