Supplementary data for the publication: Access to Water-Related Services Strongly Modulates Human Development

doi: 10.4121/20110397.v3
The doi above is for this specific version of this dataset, which is currently the latest. Newer versions may be published in the future. For a link that will always point to the latest version, please use
doi: 10.4121/20110397
Datacite citation style:
Henry Amorocho Daza (2022): Supplementary data for the publication: Access to Water-Related Services Strongly Modulates Human Development. Version 3. 4TU.ResearchData. dataset. https://doi.org/10.4121/20110397.v3
Other citation styles (APA, Harvard, MLA, Vancouver, Chicago, IEEE) available at Datacite
Dataset
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version 3 - 2022-10-27 (latest)
version 2 - 2022-10-27 version 1 - 2022-08-08
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time coverage
2000-2017
licence
cc-by.png logo CC BY 4.0

 This file has dataset that was used for the research article: "Access to water-related services strongly modulates human development", by Henry Amorocho-Daza, Pieter van der Zaag and Janez Sušnik. This research aims to explore the statistical relation between Water and Human Development. Research's data was used both for the correlation and causality analyses. Datasets are pusblished as csv files. Correlation data includes several human development and water related variables indicators for the year 2017. Causality data includes time series for water access, sanitation access and seasonal variability indicators for the years 2000-2017. All data is open access and the sources are cited in the article. For more details please refer to the accompanying Read Me file.  




history
  • 2022-08-08 first online
  • 2022-10-27 published, posted
publisher
4TU.ResearchData
format
*.csv, *.txt
organizations
IHE Delft Institute for Water Education, Land and Water Management Department.

Delft University of Technology, Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Department of Water Management

DATA

files (6)