A Systems Approach to Understanding and Mitigating Barriers to Travel Accessibility and Well-being in the West Bank, Palestine

abstract: The conflict conditions that afflict the livelihoods of Palestinian residents living in the West Bank are embedded within the population's ability to travel more so than any other routine activity. For Palestinian residents, domestic and international travel is a process of following...

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Other Authors: Ahmad, Omaya Heidi (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29631
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-296312018-06-22T03:05:53Z A Systems Approach to Understanding and Mitigating Barriers to Travel Accessibility and Well-being in the West Bank, Palestine abstract: The conflict conditions that afflict the livelihoods of Palestinian residents living in the West Bank are embedded within the population's ability to travel more so than any other routine activity. For Palestinian residents, domestic and international travel is a process of following paths riddled with multiple barriers that are both physical and political. Past studies have done well to paint a clear picture of the harsh transportation landscape in the region. However, less attention has focused on how barriers interact to indirectly and directly affect levels of accessibility and well-being. Additionally, suggested development solutions are rarely capable of being successfully implemented given current political conditions. This dissertation uses a systems approach to understand drivers of accessibility challenges in the West Bank and uses the understanding to propose a method to identify transition strategies that may be presently initiated whilst maintaining the ability to provide adequate benefit. The research question informing the study asks, How do drivers influencing the issue of poor accessibility and well-being in the West Bank persist and interact, and how might solutions be approached? The dissertation approaches the question in four sequential actions that each produces a functional planning deliverable. First, a system map that depicts the drivers and influences to the problem of poor accessibility and well-being is constructed (Chapter 4). Second, a future vision for the transportation system in the West Bank is identified (Chapter 5). Third, the system map and vision are used to assess how conflict conditions affect transition research (Chapter 6). Finally, the previous three deliverables are used to suggest a guide for transition management for transportation development in the West Bank (Chapter 7). Combinations of four different data sets, including an extensive review of published literature, field observations, individual field expert interviews, and group commuter interviews inform the research. Additionally, the Transformational Sustainability Research framework provides a normative base for the steps taken throughout the research. Ultimately, the dissertation presents an interpretation of information that has theoretical and practical application potential in transformational sustainability research and development efforts in the region respectively. Dissertation/Thesis Ahmad, Omaya Heidi (Author) Golub, Aaron (Advisor) Aggarwal, Rimjhim (Committee member) Saleh Sadaqa, Ahmad (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Sustainability Middle Eastern studies Transportation planning Accessibility Palestine Sustainability Transformational Sustainability Research Transportation Well-being eng 266 pages Doctoral Dissertation Sustainability 2015 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29631 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Sustainability
Middle Eastern studies
Transportation planning
Accessibility
Palestine
Sustainability
Transformational Sustainability Research
Transportation
Well-being
spellingShingle Sustainability
Middle Eastern studies
Transportation planning
Accessibility
Palestine
Sustainability
Transformational Sustainability Research
Transportation
Well-being
A Systems Approach to Understanding and Mitigating Barriers to Travel Accessibility and Well-being in the West Bank, Palestine
description abstract: The conflict conditions that afflict the livelihoods of Palestinian residents living in the West Bank are embedded within the population's ability to travel more so than any other routine activity. For Palestinian residents, domestic and international travel is a process of following paths riddled with multiple barriers that are both physical and political. Past studies have done well to paint a clear picture of the harsh transportation landscape in the region. However, less attention has focused on how barriers interact to indirectly and directly affect levels of accessibility and well-being. Additionally, suggested development solutions are rarely capable of being successfully implemented given current political conditions. This dissertation uses a systems approach to understand drivers of accessibility challenges in the West Bank and uses the understanding to propose a method to identify transition strategies that may be presently initiated whilst maintaining the ability to provide adequate benefit. The research question informing the study asks, How do drivers influencing the issue of poor accessibility and well-being in the West Bank persist and interact, and how might solutions be approached? The dissertation approaches the question in four sequential actions that each produces a functional planning deliverable. First, a system map that depicts the drivers and influences to the problem of poor accessibility and well-being is constructed (Chapter 4). Second, a future vision for the transportation system in the West Bank is identified (Chapter 5). Third, the system map and vision are used to assess how conflict conditions affect transition research (Chapter 6). Finally, the previous three deliverables are used to suggest a guide for transition management for transportation development in the West Bank (Chapter 7). Combinations of four different data sets, including an extensive review of published literature, field observations, individual field expert interviews, and group commuter interviews inform the research. Additionally, the Transformational Sustainability Research framework provides a normative base for the steps taken throughout the research. Ultimately, the dissertation presents an interpretation of information that has theoretical and practical application potential in transformational sustainability research and development efforts in the region respectively. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Sustainability 2015
author2 Ahmad, Omaya Heidi (Author)
author_facet Ahmad, Omaya Heidi (Author)
title A Systems Approach to Understanding and Mitigating Barriers to Travel Accessibility and Well-being in the West Bank, Palestine
title_short A Systems Approach to Understanding and Mitigating Barriers to Travel Accessibility and Well-being in the West Bank, Palestine
title_full A Systems Approach to Understanding and Mitigating Barriers to Travel Accessibility and Well-being in the West Bank, Palestine
title_fullStr A Systems Approach to Understanding and Mitigating Barriers to Travel Accessibility and Well-being in the West Bank, Palestine
title_full_unstemmed A Systems Approach to Understanding and Mitigating Barriers to Travel Accessibility and Well-being in the West Bank, Palestine
title_sort systems approach to understanding and mitigating barriers to travel accessibility and well-being in the west bank, palestine
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29631
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