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| ====== soil ====== | ====== soil ====== | ||
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| + | Soil is selected as a keyword because it operates simultaneously as a material fragment and an active actor within Bogotá’s waste infrastructures. As a stratified archive, soil accumulates leachate residues, heavy metals, ammoniacal compounds, and sediment displacement, | ||
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| + | In Bogotá, soil becomes a fragment through which the political history of waste is materially legible. Technical studies of the Doña Juana Landfill document high concentrations of lead, cadmium, chromium, and ammonium compounds in surrounding soils, introduced through recurrent leachate infiltration (Ebiotrade 2025). Geotechnical research identifies areas of reduced shear strength, ground saturation, and slope instability, | ||
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| + | These accumulations form a set of fragments: chemically altered soils, unstable clay layers, contaminated sediments, and shifting ground. Each fragment stores evidence of infrastructural stress and uneven environmental exposure. | ||
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| + | Bogotá’s southern topography further amplifies these conditions. Sediments travel downslope toward Ciudad Bolívar, where informal settlements expand on unconsolidated soils. Many households lack drainage systems or sealed floors, exposing residents to direct contact with contaminated ground. Soil contamination is therefore spatially unequal, disproportionately burdening southern districts and embedding socio-environmental inequality into the terrain itself. | ||
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| + | Actor–Network Theory highlights how soil actively participates in socio-political and ecological networks. Contaminated soil has repeatedly activated collective mobilisation, | ||
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| + | As contaminants migrate through hydrological systems—moving from soil into groundwater, | ||
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| + | Current evidence indicates that leachate infiltration from Doña Juana continues to introduce persistent heavy metals and ammoniacal pollutants into surrounding soils (Ebiotrade 2025). These contaminants threaten vegetation, human health, and local hydrological systems, particularly in the Tunjuelo watershed, where groundwater and quebrada networks transport pollutants downslope. | ||
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| + | The impacts are unevenly distributed. Informal settlements in Ciudad Bolívar—especially those without sealed floors or drainage infrastructure—face heightened exposure. Recycladores working near waste flows, children living close to unstable slopes, and households reliant on contaminated earth for daily activities experience amplified risk. Soil thus becomes a medium through which structural inequalities are reproduced. | ||
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| + | Bogotá’s polluted soils are not isolated events but expressions of a longer history of extractivism, | ||
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| + | Yet soil also shapes future possibilities. Contaminated ground becomes a site for technical remediation, | ||
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| + | Reference List: | ||
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| + | Vargas, J., Ramírez, L. and Castillo, P. (2024) ‘Factors influencing environmental awareness and solid waste management practices in low-income communities in Bogotá, Colombia’, | ||
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| + | Greenpeace Colombia (2024) Relleno sanitario Doña Juana: Una bomba de tiempo para las comunidades y el ambiente. Available at: https:// | ||
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| + | Molina, D. (2023) ‘Environmental risk and geotechnical instability around Bogotá’s Doña Juana Landfill’, | ||
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| + | Rodríguez, A. and Rincón, J. (2023) ‘Gestión del riesgo ambiental y sistemas de residuos sólidos en el sur de Bogotá’, Revista de Investigaciones Universidad del Rosario, 20(3). Available at: https:// | ||
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| + | Infobae (2025) ‘Crisis en Bogotá por bloqueo en relleno sanitario Doña Juana’, Infobae, 21 May. Available at: https:// | ||
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| + | Environmental Health Perspectives (2016) ‘Health risks associated with landfill emissions in Latin American urban environments’, | ||
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