Household Waste Sorting Participation in Developing Countries—A Meta-Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Selection of the Studies
- Publication date, topic and language: published between 1997 and 2018 and related to factors that influence the participation in waste sorting in developing countries. Articles in English were included
- Paper format: due to the aim of this meta-analysis, only peer-review publications that included data and results on factors that affect the participation in waste sorting in developing countries were included. Literature reviews and analytical reviews were not considered due to the lack of quantitative datasets required to fulfill the aim of this study. The data quality included means, standard deviations, t and F statistics tests, frequencies or counts, contingency table and Chi-square tests
2.2. Data Analysis
3. Results
4. Discussion
4.1. Governmental Incentives and Factors
4.2. Psychological Variables
4.2.1. Perceived Behavior Control
4.2.2. Perceived Consequence
4.2.3. Attitude
4.2.4. Subjective Norm
4.2.5. Moral Norm
4.3. Situational Variables
4.3.1. Situational Factors
4.3.2. Knowledge
4.3.3. Socio-Demographic Factors
Income
Gender
Education
Age
4.4. Remarks
4.5. Policy Implications
4.6. Limitations
5. Conclusions
- Meta-analysis as a method is effective in concluding factors that influence the participation in waste sorting from multiple studies. However, categorizing these factors and their relations to the participation in sorting is both constructive and challenging.
- The most strongly influencing factors are attitude, perceived behavior control and moral norms, which indicates that people’s perception of waste sorting is most influencing in prompting participation in household waste sorting in developing countries.
- The results of this meta-analysis indicate that knowledge, situational factors and government incentives can influence participation in household sorting in developing countries but the relationship between those factors and attitude, perceived behavior control and moral and subjective norms should be studied further.
- Among the most notable results is that even though socio-demographic factors were the most studied factors that contributed to this meta-analysis, they have the weakest influence on participation in waste sorting in developing countries.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Author | Factors Investigated in Meta-Analysis | Statistical Analysis | Sample Size | Country |
---|---|---|---|---|
Afroz, et al. [28] | Situational factor (space for storage at home, distance to collection point), age, gender, income | Mean value, t-value | 456 | Bangladesh |
Akil and Ho [39] | Age | Mean value, frequency and contingency table | 670 | Malaysia |
Akil, Foziah and Ho [40] | Age | Mean value, frequency and contingency table | 600 | Malaysia |
Babaei, et al. [41] | Age, education, gender | Mean value, frequency and contingency table | 2400 | Iran |
Chan [38] | Attitude, perceived behavior control, subjective norm, age, education, gender | Mean value, frequency and contingency table | 167/173 | Hong Kong |
Chen and Tung [67] | Attitude, perceived behavior control (perceived difficulty for lack of recycling facilities), subjective norm, moral norm, perceived consequences | Correlation r, t-value | 541 | Taiwan |
Chu and Chiu [25] | Attitude, perceived behavior control, subjective norm, moral norm (ethical and moral aspects in engaging in recycling), perceived consequences (protecting natural resources and reducing societal cost as a consequence for recycling), situational factor (space for storage at home and convenience of recycling facilities), governmental incentives (rewards) | Mean vale, correlation r | 386 | Taiwan |
Chung and Poon [42] | Age, education, gender, income | Mean value, Z-value | 370/738 | China |
Corral-Verdugo [43] | Attitude, perceived behavior control, perceived consequences | Mean value, correlation r | 100 | Mexico |
Du Toit, et al. [44] | Attitude, perceived behavior control, subjective norm | Correlation r, t-value | 298 | South Africa |
Du Toit, et al. [45] | Attitude, perceived behavior control, subjective norm, situational factor (space for storage at home and convenience of curbside and collection point schemes) | t-value, frequency and contingency table, correlation r | 290 | South Africa |
Ghani, et al. [68] | Attitude, perceived behavior control, subjective norm, situational factor, age, education, gender | Frequency table, correlation r | 204 | Malaysia |
Hernandez, et al. [46] | Attitude, subjective norm, knowledge | Mean value, correlation r, t-value | 410 | Ecuador |
Ifegbesan [47] | Knowledge, age, gender | Mean value, frequency and contingency table, t-value | 650 | Nigeria |
Janmaimool [48] | Subjective norm, moral norm | Mean value, correlation r | 193 | Mexico |
Jekria and Daud [49] | Attitude | Correlation r, t-value | 143 | Malaysia |
Li [50] | Age, education, gender, income | Mean value, frequency and contingency table, odds ratio | 391 | China |
Mamady [51] | Situational factor (access to recycling schemes in residential area and distance to the collection point, age, education, gender, income | Mean value, frequency and contingency table, odds ratio | 1093 | Guinea |
Mosler, et al. [69] | Attitude, perceived behavior control, subjective norm, governmental incentives (trust to the government and local authorities) | Correlation r, t-value | 299 | Cuba |
Nguyen, et al. [70] | Attitude, perceived behavior control, subjective norm, moral norm, perceived consequences as waste problem threat health, governmental incentives (rewards and benefit from recycling and trust to local authorities) | Frequency and contingency table, correlation r | 180 | Vietnam |
Nomura, et al. [52] | Attitude, moral norm, situational factor, governmental incentives | Frequency and contingency table, correlation r | 357 | Vietnam |
Omran, et al. [53] | Age, education, gender, income | Mean value, frequency and contingency table | 389 | Malaysia |
Owusu, et al. [54] | Age, education, gender | Mean value, t-value, frequency and contingency table | 384 | Ghana |
Oyekale [55] | Governmental incentives (regulation for recycling), age, education, income | Mean value, frequency and contingency table | 23518 | South Africa |
Pakpour, et al. [56] | Attitude, perceived behavior control, subjective norm, moral norm, age, education | Mean value, frequency and contingency table, correlation r | 1676 | Iran |
Ying [57] | Perceived behavior control (perceived difficulty for recycling), subjective norm, education | Mean value, frequency and contingency table, correlation r | 618 | China |
Ramayah, et al. [58] | Attitude, perceived behavior control (cost for recycling), subjective norm, situational factor (availability of recycling infrastructure) | Correlation r, t-value | 200 | Malaysia |
Singhirunnu-sorn, et al. [59] | Attitude, knowledge, age, income | Mean value, frequency and contingency table, correlation r | 151 | Thailand |
Strydom [84] | Attitude, behavior control, subjective norm | Mean value, frequency and contingency table, correlation r | 2004 | South Africa |
Tadesse [120] | Attitude, situational factor (access to container for recycling), governmental incentives (regulation for recycling), age, education, gender, income | Mean value, correlation r | 400 | Ethiopia |
Tatlonghari and Jamias [60] | Attitude, knowledge, education, income | Mean value, F-value, correlation r | 100 | Philippines |
Tamas, et al. [71] | Attitude, perceived behavior control, subjective norm | Correlation r, t-value | 765 | Cuba |
Tang, et al. [61] | Attitude, perceived behavior control, subjective norm, moral norm, perceived consequences, situational factor, knowledge | Correlation r, t-value | 765 | China |
Xiao, et al. [62] | Subjective norm, knowledge, governmental incentives (rewards and regulation) | Mean value, frequency table correlation r | 712 | China |
Xu, et al. [63] | Knowledge, governmental incentives (rewards and regulation) | Mean value, Correlation r | 631 | China |
Yuan, et al. [64] | Attitude, perceived behavior control, subjective norm, moral norm | Mean value, frequency and contingency table, correlation r | 362 | China |
Zhang, et al. [65] | Attitude, perceived behavior control, subjective norm, moral norm, situational factor, knowledge, age, education, gender, income | Mean value, frequency and contingency table, correlation r | 208 | China |
Zhang, et al. [66] | Attitude, perceived behavior control, subjective norm | Mean value, F-value, correlation r | 250 | China |
Zhang, et al. [31] | Gender | Mean value, frequency and contingency table | 509 | China |
Appendix B
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Factor Analyzed | Correlation r (95% CI) | Q-Value | I-Square (%) | Failsafe N | No. of Studies |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Governmental Incentives and Factors | |||||
Governmental Incentives and Factors | 0.26 [0.16, 0.36] ** | 255 ** | 96.1 | 935 | 11 |
Psychological Variables | |||||
Perceived Behavior Control | 0.28 [0.22, 0.34] ** | 159 ** | 88.7 | 3734 | 19 |
Perceived Consequence | 0.25 [0.03, 0.44] * | 89 ** | 95.5 | 169 | 5 |
Attitude | 0.39 [0.24, 0.52] ** | 1559 ** | 98.6 | 8367 | 23 |
Subjective Norm | 0.30 [0.22, 0.38] ** | 369 ** | 94.8 | 4364 | 19 |
Moral Norm | 0.35 [0.22, 0.46] ** | 171 ** | 95.3 | 1356 | 9 |
Situational Variables | |||||
Situational Factors | 0.19 [0.10, 0.29] ** | 222 ** | 93.7 | 1213 | 15 |
Knowledge | 0.14 [−0.05, 0.32] | 226 ** | 96.9 | 200 | 8 |
Age | 0.08 [0.02, 0.14] ** | 257 ** | 93.4 | 409 | 18 |
Gender | 0.11 [0.01, 0.21] * | 247 ** | 95.1 | 249 | 13 |
Education | 0.09 [0.02, 0.15] ** | 209 ** | 93.8 | 839 | 14 |
Income | 0.02 [−0.07, 0.12] | 325 ** | 96.0 | 16 | 14 |
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Rousta, K.; Zisen, L.; Hellwig, C. Household Waste Sorting Participation in Developing Countries—A Meta-Analysis. Recycling 2020, 5, 6. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling5010006
Rousta K, Zisen L, Hellwig C. Household Waste Sorting Participation in Developing Countries—A Meta-Analysis. Recycling. 2020; 5(1):6. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling5010006
Chicago/Turabian StyleRousta, Kamran, Liu Zisen, and Coralie Hellwig. 2020. "Household Waste Sorting Participation in Developing Countries—A Meta-Analysis" Recycling 5, no. 1: 6. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling5010006
APA StyleRousta, K., Zisen, L., & Hellwig, C. (2020). Household Waste Sorting Participation in Developing Countries—A Meta-Analysis. Recycling, 5(1), 6. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling5010006