Who we are
Waste for Life stages opportunities to build resilient and connected communities, where people, culture, nature and science conjoin.
We support educational and community strategies that actively facilitate systemic environmental and social justice change.
Broad and equal access to society’s resources are the foundations of a just society
Our vision
Waste for Life, Inc., our organization, believes that broad and equal access to society’s resources are the foundations of a just society, and both of our programs stage opportunities to build resilient and connected communities, where people, culture, nature and science conjoin.
Waste for Life, our international program, provides access to scientific knowledge and technology, usually circumscribed by privilege, to people living on society’s margins. We leverage our network to open up pathways towards autonomy and genuine economic security for people who need it most – those living at the intersections of waste and poverty. Standing People Together, our local program, connects people to people and people to nature through our Forest Exploratorium and Arts programming, which collectively probe issues relevant and meaningful to our pluralistic rural community. All of our work is value-driven because it is based upon principles of solidarity, cooperative interchange, and social justice. It is political because we put our values into action.
Raymond Williams captures the simple principle that unites those who are committed to the Waste for Life project:
“It is only in a shared belief and insistence that there are practical alternatives that the balance of forces and chances begins to alter. Once the inevitabilities are challenged, we begin gathering our resources for a journey of hope. If there are no easy answers there are still available discoverable hard answers, and it is these that we can now learn to make and share. This has been, from the beginning, the sense and the impulse of the long revolution.”
Network
We are our network, and our network is built upon partnerships with people who share our vision and a belief that values not acted upon are of little value. We are students, academics, and professionals engaging in research, development, and design who make the outputs of our work freely available for others to use and extend. We are the community groups and cooperatives, which take those outputs, build them, shape them, and turn them into initiatives that meet our local needs. We leverage our diversity to implement creative solutions to complex and persistent social and environmental problems.
Education
Education is central to Waste for Life’s mission. We rely on strong ties to universities for materials research, technology development, and product design. But we give back what we take. When WFL projects are integrated into university curriculum, that curriculum broadens the norms that traditionally prescribe most areas of study or practice: the disciplinary one — how we do what we do — and the market one i.e., how we make money for whoever hires us. By bringing social and environmental norms into classrooms and linking them to interdisciplinary and collaborative experiences, which are necessary components of our work, WFL offers students alternative ways of practicing their skills and an alternate purpose for their professional goals.
Robert Wells, a former RISD student, says it best.
History
Waste for Life Lesotho began in the summer of 2006 and Waste for Life Argentina began one year later in July 2007. Waste for Life Sri Lanka began in 2015, and our newest project, Waste for Life Mexico, in 2024. Our work is and has been supported by teams from the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina; the Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Industrial, Argentina; Queens University in Kingston, Ontario; the University of Naples, Italy; the University of Western Australia in Perth; the Rhode Island School of Design and Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island; Imperial College, London; The National University of Lesotho, Lesotho; Lerotholi Polytechnic, Lesotho; our partner universities in Sri Lanka, the Universities of Jaffna, Moratuwa and Sri Jayewardenepura; Universidad Xochicalco in Tijuana Mexico, and dozens of individuals who share our commitment to seek innovative ways of challenging social and ecological injustices.