22 minutes Study Guide Grades 7-12, College, Adult Directed by David Springbett Produced by Asterisk Productions DVD Purchase $79, Rent $45 US Release Date: 1991 Copyright Date: 1990 DVD ISBN: 1-59458-919-4 VHS ISBN: 1-56029-379-9 Subjects African Studies Economics Humanities Recycling Social Psychology Technology Awards and Festivals Blue Ribbon, American Film & Video Festival Bronze Apple, National Educational Film & Video Festival |
No Spare Parts Ingenious recycling of used car parts in Ghana.
NO SPARE PARTS portrays the introduction and utilization of appropriate technology in a developing nation. In Ghana, thrown away materials are being recovered, and used to build and modernize their economy. Requiring only minimal financial resources, small workshops use recycled automobile parts and traditional crafting skills to produce machinery of great benefit to the local people. Grinding mills, lathes, palm oil presses and lumber saws, all made from scrap, enable the population to improve their everyday lives. Ghana's utilization of discards as a resource for raw materials reduces their reliance on imports and improves their independence and self-reliance. The appropriate technology movement is burgeoning in Ghana and having a beneficial impact on all levels of society. There's a message here for our own throw-away society, and a lesson in ingenuity. Reviews "Unique presentation... appropriate in classes studying Third World development on the high school or college level." ***Video Rating Guide for Libraries "David Suzuki hosts this documentary... suggests benefits of reusing metal products to first-world countries, too." Booklist |