Trash for Cash: Making a Killing and Making a Living on Garbage in China
 
Joshua Goldstein
 
Friday, November 20th at 4:15 p.m.
Hahn 108
Trash for Cash PRC at 60
In this age of globalization one sector has arguably grown faster than any other: the global trade in trash.  Since 1990 the value of globally traded wastes and scrap has shot up by roughly 2000%.  And the overwhelming majority of those empty bottles, crushed cardboard boxes, and junked appliances are on their way to China.  Indeed, the US's biggest export to China's in this century has been scrap.  China's domestic market in trash is also huge and continues to grow as consumerism becomes a way of life and a sign of wealth.  At least 3 million Chinese make a living that is directly dependent on post-consumer wastes.  This presentation will try (and certainly fail) to make sense of the growing global garbage complex from the perspective of China's street-level trash traders.
 

PRC at 60

Joshua Goldstein 
Joshua Goldstein is an Associate Professor in modern Chinese history at the University of Southern California and author of the book Drama Kings: Players and Publics in the Re-Creation of Peking opera, 1870-1937.  His current research focuses on the lives of trash-pickers in urban China and on the growing importance of recycling and the global trade in scrap and post-consumer waste in the Chinese economy.

PRC at 60

PRC at 60

Jointly sponsored by the History Department of Pomona College, the History Department of CMC, and the PBI. 
Contact: Angelina Chin at (909) 607-5742 or angelina.chin@pomona.edu 
PBI at Pomona College
Pacific Basin Institute at Pomona College