e-Waste Management Awareness Program in Solomon Island: A Project Risk Management Framework

e-Waste Management Awareness Program in Solomon Island: A Project Risk Management Framework

Shamsuddin Ahmed
Copyright: © 2019 |Volume: 10 |Issue: 2 |Pages: 19
ISSN: 1938-0232|EISSN: 1938-0240|EISBN13: 9781522564874|DOI: 10.4018/IJITPM.2019040105
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MLA

Ahmed, Shamsuddin. "e-Waste Management Awareness Program in Solomon Island: A Project Risk Management Framework." IJITPM vol.10, no.2 2019: pp.41-59. http://doi.org/10.4018/IJITPM.2019040105

APA

Ahmed, S. (2019). e-Waste Management Awareness Program in Solomon Island: A Project Risk Management Framework. International Journal of Information Technology Project Management (IJITPM), 10(2), 41-59. http://doi.org/10.4018/IJITPM.2019040105

Chicago

Ahmed, Shamsuddin. "e-Waste Management Awareness Program in Solomon Island: A Project Risk Management Framework," International Journal of Information Technology Project Management (IJITPM) 10, no.2: 41-59. http://doi.org/10.4018/IJITPM.2019040105

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Abstract

Worldwide electronic waste items have grown as product life has become shorter. The electronic products are e-waste and end up in rubbish dumps and recycling centers, posing a threat to the environment. The e-waste disposal methods adopted by Pacific island countries (PICs) are inadequate. The Solomon Island (SI) is one of the PICs and does not have a sustainable solution. The purpose of this article is to develop a framework for sustainable e-waste management campaign based on a project management framework incorporating stakeholder, risk, time, and public awareness and people management. A macro project management risk model is constructed to implement an e-waste awareness education program and assist PICs policy makers to successfully launch e-waste management program. It is shown in this work how an e-waste project management awareness program can work for SI. The important factors to be controlled for successful e-awareness program are identified with a project risk management framework. The impact, failure, and consequences of the e-waste awareness campaign are quantified. This article also provides a review of the e-waste awareness in Pacific island countries and puts forward a pan to mitigate the e-waste problem in IS. The e‐wastes in SI are unwanted electronic equipment and electrical appliances which reached its end of life and does not function as it was planned. The toxic elements within e-waste contaminate the water, land, and air. The SI does not have enough resources and technical capacity to recycle e-waste. Appropriate management and disposal of e‐waste is essential as the long-standing shield for the protection of SI and regional PICs environments. The aim is to maintain long‐term regional sustainability. The adoption of national e‐waste management policies will safeguard the movement recycling and disposal of e‐waste in a controlled manner through the Basel and Waigani convention protocols. The study designs a new paradigm for solving e-waste management issues is PICs using a project management approach, focusing on risk management, risk impact, organizational design with communication plan, and human interaction.

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