Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148
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Article Citation - WoS: 14Citation - Scopus: 16Hybridising Counterurbanisation: Lessons From Japan's Kankeijinko(Pergamon-elsevier Science Ltd, 2024) Dilley, Luke; Gkartzios, Menelaos; Kudo, Shogo; Odagiri, TokumiThis paper examines the discourse and material manifestation of kankeijinko over bar , a phrase used in Japan to describe, primarily, highly mobile groups of urbanities who make regular visits to the countryside. Drawing on Japanese grey literature, secondary data analysis, national-level policy reports and exploratory fieldwork in the northwest of Japan, we argue that the concept of kankeijinko over bar offers a view of rural mobility quite different from more established views of counterurbanisation, at least in the way that it has been captured in the global north. As a concept, kankeijinko over bar invites us to move beyond simple and binary taxonomies of migration and settlement, and destabilizes the notion of rural vitality as being linked to rural populations that are spatially fixed and bounded. Further, the promotion of kankeijinko over bar in policy discourses in Japan has the potential to support new hybrid, fluid and place-based rural lifestyles that contribute to an interconnected global countryside. On the other hand, the discourse of kankeijinko over bar might privilege certain modes of rural mobility and being, circumscribing the potentialities of these mobile groups.Article Citation - WoS: 31Citation - Scopus: 38Resource Recovery From and Management of Wastewater in Rural South Africa: Possibilities and Practices(Elsevier, 2021) Montwedi, Masego; Munyaradzi, Mujuru; Pinoy, Luc; Dutta, Abhishek; Ikumi, David S.; Motoasca, Emilia; Van der Bruggen, BartThe continuous reduction in water resource availability is one of the major global societal challenges. Wastewater treatment plants (WWTP) play an important role in this, as they can provide water recovery. Furthermore, effective sanitation services lead to a significant reduction of health risks and protect the environment. However, WWTPs consume large amounts of energy to comply with discharge standards. At the same time, wastewater contains resources, which can be recovered for secondary uses, if treated properly. This is particularly useful for rural South Africa where challenges associated with water-based pollution, declining nutrients and water shortage, require a paradigm shift. This involves the transition of wastewater treatment plants into water, sanitation and resource (nutrients and energy) recovery facilities, leading further to social, economic and environmental sustainability. This process will involve the implementation of engineering tools for predictive modelling of the waste resource recovery systems. This review identifies the conceptual need for such a systematic shift from wastewater treatment to waste recovery facilities in rural South Africa. The targeted impact is to promote and help the uptake of the conversion of wastewater treatment systems into low cost and environmentally sustainable water and resource recovery facilities. Overall, the outlook is positive for the future use of these systems in South-Africa.
