Le rôle des « Berbechas » en Tunisie : Le pilier marginalisé de l’économie circulaire ?

In Tunisia, informal waste pickers known as Berbechas play a central role in the waste recovery and recycling chain, yet remain excluded from institutional waste management frameworks. In a context shaped by international pressures to modernize public services, this article examines how public polic...

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Main Author: Maha Bouhlel-Abid
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Éditions en environnement VertigO 2024-12-01
Series:VertigO
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/48747
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author Maha Bouhlel-Abid
author_facet Maha Bouhlel-Abid
author_sort Maha Bouhlel-Abid
collection DOAJ
description In Tunisia, informal waste pickers known as Berbechas play a central role in the waste recovery and recycling chain, yet remain excluded from institutional waste management frameworks. In a context shaped by international pressures to modernize public services, this article examines how public policies contribute to their marginalization and explores the challenges and implications of potentially formalizing their work. The primary research question guiding this study is: to what extent can the formalization of waste pickers offer a fair and effective pathway for both their socio-economic recognition and for improving Tunisia’s waste management system? Based on qualitative fieldwork conducted in Greater Tunis (including interviews with waste pickers, intermediary collectors, and institutional actors, along with periods of participant observation), the findings highlight the structural contribution of Berbechas to urban recycling, while exposing their institutional invisibility. Attempts at formalization, mostly driven by NGOs, face numerous legal, institutional, and social barriers, and often fail to align with the expectations and lived realities of waste pickers. The article argues that formalization should not be seen as a universal or technical fix. It must instead be understood as a political process, co-constructed with those concerned, and supported by broader institutional reforms. Without this, formalization risks deepening the very forms of exclusion it seeks to address.
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institution Kabale University
issn 1492-8442
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publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Éditions en environnement VertigO
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spelling doaj-art-5c52d5b6ebe448ef806dc2efc5448d0f2025-08-20T03:40:51ZfraÉditions en environnement VertigOVertigO1492-84422024-12-0124310.4000/14ehnLe rôle des « Berbechas » en Tunisie : Le pilier marginalisé de l’économie circulaire ?Maha Bouhlel-AbidIn Tunisia, informal waste pickers known as Berbechas play a central role in the waste recovery and recycling chain, yet remain excluded from institutional waste management frameworks. In a context shaped by international pressures to modernize public services, this article examines how public policies contribute to their marginalization and explores the challenges and implications of potentially formalizing their work. The primary research question guiding this study is: to what extent can the formalization of waste pickers offer a fair and effective pathway for both their socio-economic recognition and for improving Tunisia’s waste management system? Based on qualitative fieldwork conducted in Greater Tunis (including interviews with waste pickers, intermediary collectors, and institutional actors, along with periods of participant observation), the findings highlight the structural contribution of Berbechas to urban recycling, while exposing their institutional invisibility. Attempts at formalization, mostly driven by NGOs, face numerous legal, institutional, and social barriers, and often fail to align with the expectations and lived realities of waste pickers. The article argues that formalization should not be seen as a universal or technical fix. It must instead be understood as a political process, co-constructed with those concerned, and supported by broader institutional reforms. Without this, formalization risks deepening the very forms of exclusion it seeks to address.https://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/48747Tunisiacircular economyBerbechasinformal recyclingformalizationwaste governance
spellingShingle Maha Bouhlel-Abid
Le rôle des « Berbechas » en Tunisie : Le pilier marginalisé de l’économie circulaire ?
VertigO
Tunisia
circular economy
Berbechas
informal recycling
formalization
waste governance
title Le rôle des « Berbechas » en Tunisie : Le pilier marginalisé de l’économie circulaire ?
title_full Le rôle des « Berbechas » en Tunisie : Le pilier marginalisé de l’économie circulaire ?
title_fullStr Le rôle des « Berbechas » en Tunisie : Le pilier marginalisé de l’économie circulaire ?
title_full_unstemmed Le rôle des « Berbechas » en Tunisie : Le pilier marginalisé de l’économie circulaire ?
title_short Le rôle des « Berbechas » en Tunisie : Le pilier marginalisé de l’économie circulaire ?
title_sort le role des berbechas en tunisie le pilier marginalise de l economie circulaire
topic Tunisia
circular economy
Berbechas
informal recycling
formalization
waste governance
url https://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/48747
work_keys_str_mv AT mahabouhlelabid leroledesberbechasentunisielepiliermarginalisedeleconomiecirculaire