loader from loading.io

The International War on Waste

World Politics Review

Release Date: 02/25/2022

Ethiopia, Eritrea and Tigray Are Back on a War Footing show art Ethiopia, Eritrea and Tigray Are Back on a War Footing

World Politics Review

What do you think of the audio versions of articles, read by an AI-generated voice, that we've been featuring on this podcast feed of late? Our publisher wants your comments. Listen to the episode to find out where to send your thoughts. In this briefing, originally published March 27, 2025, Fred Harter looks at the potential for fresh conflict in Ethiopia. Ethiopia, Eritrea and Tigray Are Back on a War Footing ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia—A political crisis in Ethiopia’s war-battered Tigray escalated dramatically in March, bringing armed men out onto the streets and raising fears of a fresh...

info_outline
The World Could Use a Crimes Against Humanity Treaty show art The World Could Use a Crimes Against Humanity Treaty

World Politics Review

info_outline
Trump's Bluster Won't Help a Caribbean Region That Needs Solutions show art Trump's Bluster Won't Help a Caribbean Region That Needs Solutions

World Politics Review

info_outline
In Mexico, the Push for a National Care System Is Gaining Momentum show art In Mexico, the Push for a National Care System Is Gaining Momentum

World Politics Review

info_outline
Regional Divisions Are Fraying West Africa's Security Cooperation show art Regional Divisions Are Fraying West Africa's Security Cooperation

World Politics Review

info_outline
The Global Order Got Over COVID-19 Pretty Quickly show art The Global Order Got Over COVID-19 Pretty Quickly

World Politics Review

info_outline
The EU's Common Agricultural Policy Has Created a Farming Crisis show art The EU's Common Agricultural Policy Has Created a Farming Crisis

World Politics Review

info_outline
The U.N. Thought It Was Prepared for Trump's Return. It Wasn't show art The U.N. Thought It Was Prepared for Trump's Return. It Wasn't

World Politics Review

info_outline
Lebanon's Postwar Reconstruction Is at a Standstill show art Lebanon's Postwar Reconstruction Is at a Standstill

World Politics Review

info_outline
For Xi, Boosting China's Domestic Consumption Means Working Harder show art For Xi, Boosting China's Domestic Consumption Means Working Harder

World Politics Review

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Plastics, e-waste and other hazardous waste are routinely traded across borders in what amounts to an “out of sight, out of mind” approach for the rich countries that produce them. The story is more complicated for the communities that receive and dispose of the waste. 

Hazardous waste poses risks to the health of local communities and the environment, spurring attempts to ban its movement across borders. But in countries like Turkey, Vietnam and Ghana, waste is often processed to extract its residual value. The important source of income it provides explains why those efforts have been of limited success and questionable usefulness.

To discuss the risks but also the complexity of the international trade of hazardous wastes, Kate O’Neill joins Peter Dörrie on Trend Lines. O’Neill is a professor at the University of California Berkeley’s Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, where she specializes in researching waste, the circular economy and global environmental governance. 

Relevant articles on WPR:  

Cuts to Waste Imports in East Asia Put Pressure on World’s Producers 

Toxic Waste Spill in Ivory Coast Exposes 'Dark Underbelly' of Globalization 

E-Waste Is Taking Over the World. 5G Will Make It Even Worse 

Can the World Win the War on Plastic? 

Trend Lines is produced and edited by Peter Dörrie, a freelance journalist and analyst focusing on security and resource politics in Africa. You can follow him on Twitter at @peterdoerrie