Rethinking socio-cultural resistance: systemic factors behind successful and failed transitions to toilet-linked anaerobic digesters in Nepal and India

dc.contributor.authorKalina, Marc
dc.contributor.authorBoyd Williams, Natalie
dc.contributor.authorCampbell, Ben
dc.date.accessioned2026-06-15T12:44:24Z
dc.date.available2026-06-15T12:44:24Z
dc.date.issued2026
dc.description.abstractToilet-linked anaerobic digesters (TLADs) are promoted as technologies that can simultaneously address household energy, sanitation, and agricultural needs, yet diffusion remains uneven, and project failures are frequently attributed to “socio-cultural resistance.” This paper challenges that narrative by examining why Nepal's domestic biogas programme achieved greater success in implementing TLADs than India's, despite broadly similar policies and rural socio-economic conditions. Using a sustainability transitions framework, we conduct a comparative case study of successful adoption in Nepal's Gandaki Province with non-adoption in Assam, India. The study draws on 57 household interviews, 15 expert-stakeholder interviews, and policy and programme documents. Findings indicate that while socio-cultural norms influence TLAD diffusion, they are not stand-alone determinants of household transitions. Instead, these norms interact with programme design, governance structures, institutional commitment, and wider policy environments, and are conditioned by local socio-technical contexts. These interactions shape how socio-cultural norms manifest in relation to technology adoption at the household level. We argue that failed transitions are too often attributed disproportionately to socio-cultural resistance—a framing that unfairly shifts responsibility onto households while obscuring systemic shortcomings such as inadequate targeting, weak institutional support, and misalignment between technologies and local contexts. A more balanced framing should acknowledge socio-cultural norms while situating them within broader socio-technical and policy environments. Such reframing could shift research and practice away from narratives of household blame and towards critical assessments of contextual fit, programme capacity, and policy coherence, supporting more equitable and context-appropriate transitions in sanitation and household energy systems such as TLADs
dc.identifier.citationWilliams, N.B., Campbell, B., Raha, D., Baruah, D.C., Kalina, M., Tilley, E. and Dickie, J., 2026. Rethinking socio-cultural resistance: Systemic factors behind successful and failed transitions to toilet-linked anaerobic digesters in Nepal and India. Energy Research & Social Science, 131, p.104496.
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.erss.2025.104496
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10566/24486
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherElsevier Ltd
dc.subjectSocio-cultural norms
dc.subjectTechnology adoption
dc.subjectToilet-linked anaerobic digesters (TLADs)
dc.subjectSustainability transitions framework
dc.subjectPolicy environments
dc.titleRethinking socio-cultural resistance: systemic factors behind successful and failed transitions to toilet-linked anaerobic digesters in Nepal and India
dc.typeArticle

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