Water management during armed conflict: Case study data Susiya, Palestine

doi:10.4121/d8feb9eb-387d-40e9-ae4e-35496be92036.v1
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/d8feb9eb-387d-40e9-ae4e-35496be92036
Datacite citation style:
Schillinger, Juliane; Atawneh, Hayat; Alassa, Israa (2024): Water management during armed conflict: Case study data Susiya, Palestine. Version 1. 4TU.ResearchData. dataset. https://doi.org/10.4121/d8feb9eb-387d-40e9-ae4e-35496be92036.v1
Other citation styles (APA, Harvard, MLA, Vancouver, Chicago, IEEE) available at Datacite
Dataset

This dataset is part of a PhD research project investigating the impacts of armed conflict on water management in the Middle East. It contains the primary data collected in the context of a case study on Susiya, a small Palestinian community in the South Hebron Hills, West Bank. Data collection took place between September 2018 and April 2019 in collaboration between the University of Twente and the Al-Quds University through the Palestinian-Dutch Academic Cooperation Programme on Water (PADUCO) project 'Multi-Level Contextual Factors of Local Water Management in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.' The dataset also contains a list of secondary data sources, most of which are publicly available.

history
  • 2024-10-31 first online, published, posted
publisher
4TU.ResearchData
format
.pdf
funding
  • Palestinian-Dutch Academic Cooperation Programme on Water (PADUCO) Ministry of Foreign Affairs / Netherlands Representative Office in Ramallah
organizations
University of Twente, Faculty of Behavioural, Management and Social Sciences, Department of Technology, Policy and Society
Al-Quds University

DATA - restricted access

Reason

Some interview transcipts may include sensitive information on the access to and administration of water resources in ongoing armed conflicts. Access is restricted in principle to protect the interviewees, but will be granted upon reasonable request to supplement future research on water in conflict settings. When requesting access, please be as specific as possible with regard to your research or advocacy project and the planned outputs.

End User Licence Agreement

The contents of this dataset may only be used for research and advocacy purposes on the access to and management of water in conflict-affected settings, with the following conditions of use:

  • Attribution: When using contents of this dataset, credit the author(s) and DOI of the dataset as indicated in the metadata.
  • Sharing: You are not allowed to publish the contents of this dataset or share them with others. Please refer other interested parties to the DOI, so they may request access via 4TU.ResearchData themselves.
  • Direct quotes: In principle, do not quote directly from the interview transcripts. If you feel the strong need to include a specific direct quote, contact the author(s) to obtain permission.
  • Pay it forward: As much as possible, please share your own data on water in conflict-affected settings in turn, to give back to the community and enable more rigorous future research on the impacts of armed conflict.

▶  Request access to data.

Your request will be sent to the owner of the dataset.

Send request for access to data