Book contents
- Polluted Politics
- The Global Middle East
- Polluted Politics
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface:
- Acknowledgments
- Part I Positioning E-Waste Hubs
- 1 The Emergence of E-Waste Hubs
- 2 The West Line E-Waste Economy
- 3 Crude Portrayals, Crude Proposals
- 4 Co-creating E-Waste Hub Futures
- 5 Can Tails Wag the Dog?
- Part II Pathways and Predicaments
- References
- Index
2 - The West Line E-Waste Economy
from Part I - Positioning E-Waste Hubs
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2024
- Polluted Politics
- The Global Middle East
- Polluted Politics
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface:
- Acknowledgments
- Part I Positioning E-Waste Hubs
- 1 The Emergence of E-Waste Hubs
- 2 The West Line E-Waste Economy
- 3 Crude Portrayals, Crude Proposals
- 4 Co-creating E-Waste Hub Futures
- 5 Can Tails Wag the Dog?
- Part II Pathways and Predicaments
- References
- Index
Summary
This chapter details the West Line e-waste economy as an example of global destruction networks operating globally as an under-examined shadow of the more familiar and visible phases of the economy. It traces the highly effective collection pathways developed by Palestinian entrepreneurs to locate and funnel end-of-life materials from Israeli households, institutions, and scrapyards to the West Line, along with lesser inputs from Palestinian areas. We describe the navigation of borders, including through mediation of Israeli settlers, as a cascading flow of scrap arrives to the West Line, for resale, repair, and processing, with valuable metals extracted for export back to Israel, and low value remnants disposed. This informal economic value chain employs a complex hierarchy of a thousand workers, operating in an ecosystem of interlocked dynamic niches of specialization and synergy, ranging from multi-million dollar metal traders to children picking through ash for pieces of copper, producing one of the largest Palestinian exports to Israel. At the same time, similar to other hubs globally, these vibrant economic contributions in a context of scarce opportunity are in increasingly tense relations with the wide-ranging severe environmental and health impacts of the crude extraction and disposal practices employed and international scrutiny.
Keywords
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- Information
- Polluted PoliticsThe Development of an Israeli-Palestinian E-Waste Economy, pp. 33 - 60Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024