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Plastic in Lake Titicaca: Tourism and Management of Non-Biodegradable Waste in the Andes

Worldwide Waste 2022 17 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jordi Gascón

Summary

This study examines the emergence of plastic pollution awareness among indigenous Andean communities on Amantani Island in Lake Titicaca, Peru, using discard studies theory to analyze how tourism has spread urban cleanliness perceptions to rural communities. Tourism-driven demand for a pristine landscape can paradoxically drive waste practices that increase environmental and health risks from plastic waste management.

Plastic has invaded the rural Andean landscape in recent decades. Its increase is due to the emergence of new consumption patterns, the absence of adequate waste management systems, and the persistence of a logic that incorporates waste into nature—which was appropriate when waste was biodegradable. However, the rural indigenous population is aware of plastic’s polluting effects. Tourism, which transmits urban and Western perceptions of cleanliness, is one of the factors that have led to this view. Tourism spreads an ecological perception that supports the sustainability of natural resources. It also spreads a bucolic perception of the landscape. Sometimes, the two discourses complement each other, but they can also clash. From the discard studies paradigm, and based on the case of Amantaní Island (Lake Titicaca, Peruvian Andes), the article shows that tourist demand for a pristine landscape can drive practices that increase the environmental and health risks of plastic waste.

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