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Assessing Strategic GIS Perceptions in Waste Management Planning: A Readiness Model from South Africa's Vhembe District

Authors
 Tahulela, Aifani Confidence  ;  Hashemi, Shervin  ;  Lourens, Melanie Elizabeth 
Citation
 SUSTAINABILITY, Vol.17(23), 2025-11 
Article Number
 10626 
Journal Title
SUSTAINABILITY
Issue Date
2025-11
Keywords
Geographic Information Systems ; municipal solid waste ; structural equation modelling ; sustainable waste management ; Vhembe District
Abstract
Municipal solid waste management (MSWM) in low-capacity urban contexts is frequently constrained by fragmented governance, limited institutional readiness, and premature implementation of digital technologies. This study investigates how internal operational capacity, external factors, and Geographic Information System (GIS) integration interact sequentially to influence waste governance outcomes in South Africa's Vhembe District. Using survey data from 399 municipal actors and Structural Equation Modeling (SEM), the findings indicate that internal capacity encompassing staffing sufficiency, financial coordination, and service regularity is the most significant determinant of operational performance (beta = 0.432, p < 0.001). This improvement in operations subsequently enhances strategic service effectiveness (beta = 0.267, p < 0.001). GIS does not directly improve daily waste operations but contributes significantly to long-term planning outcomes, such as route optimization and infrastructure siting (beta = 0.130, p = 0.017). External factors, particularly community participation, exhibit limited standalone influence, becoming effective only when foundational systems are stabilized. These insights inform the Municipal Readiness Model for Digital Waste Governance (MRM-DWG), a three-stage framework that aligns interventions with institutional maturity: (1) internal operational readiness, (2) strategic digital integration, and (3) participatory and external engagement. The MRM-DWG advances a sequencing logic rooted in absorptive capacity theory, offering a context-sensitive governance tool applicable to similarly constrained municipalities across the Global South.
Files in This Item:
90969.pdf Download
DOI
10.3390/su172310626
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Others (기타) > 1. Journal Papers
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/209996
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