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WP-01-13

Allan Schnaiberg, Adam S. Weinberg, and David Pellow

Abstract

Much contemporary environmental policymaking shifts our political focus away from our ecological goals, stressing instead the need to create “economically efficient” means to accomplish these goals. Social scientists have paid limited attention to the social distributive outcomes of such policymaking. Yet these outcomes of heightening attention to economic efficiences affect the scale and intensity of political constituencies for environmental protection. In this paper, we trace this process of “markets over politics” and its impacts in the United States, Chicago, and its northern suburb of Evanston in the 1990s. Both cities constructed and implemented curbside recycling programs during this period. But their rationale, goals, and means of recycling were dramatically different.

Although both communities recruited unskilled labor for the actual sorting jobs, the Chicago facility initially offered a repressive and regressive mode of labor control, essentially reducing low-income workers to a day-labor contingent worker status. Recyclable diversion rates were extremely low for the wide diversity of materials collected. In contrast, Evanston offered both life-skills training to its workers and assistance in getting employment at the end of their recycling jobs. Their recyclable diversion rates were quite high, for the restricted materials they selected. Paradoxically, the political administration of Chicago eventually intervened to improve both work conditions and recyclable diversion rates. But the budgetary politics in Evanston led to its abandoning its unique recycling program, and contracting out the work to the private sector.

We also explore the factors that led each community’s decision-makers to select and to modify their technologies of curbside recycling: capital-intensive in Chicago, and labor-intensive in Evanston, and their quite different managerial agendas. These differences and dynamics suggest the value of studying how political involvement in the environ-mental policymaking process can alter the balance between politics and markets in environmental protection.

Allan Schnaiberg, Department of Sociology, Northwestern University
Adam S. Weinberg,
Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Colgate University
David Pellow,
Department of Sociology and Ethnic Studies, University of Colorado at Boulder



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