Realist Methodology and the Articulation of Modes of Production (ص 393)

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عنوان
Realist Methodology and the Articulation of Modes of Production (ص 393)
المحتوى
Piped water supply either into the household or the _ yard.
(16) In the north Jordan Valley, households most commonly
(41%) got their water supply either from a spring or open
canal (i.e. the al Fara'a Canal), 12% received their domestic
supply from bore wells, 11% from the village faucet and 2%
from an Israeli settlement.
The village level access is varied and comes from a_ wide
range of sources. Both Bardala and “Ain al Beda in the
northernmost sector of the Valley have access to piped water
supplies which are linked into the Israeli water grid. [In
Bardala nine-tenths of households (2% inside and 89% outside)
have access to a piped water supply and two-fifths of
households in ~Ain al Beda (2% inside and 40% outside) have
access to a Similar supply. However, just as many in “Ain al
Beda get their supply from the village faucet and a further
17% get their supply from privately owned springs. Neither of
these two villages depend on bore wells for their supply. In
Marj Najeh almost three-quarters of households get their
domestic water supply from bore wells. A further quarter get
their supply from the village faucet. In Zbeidat a third of
households get their domestic water supply piped directly
into their houses from a gravitational water system, two-
fifths get their supply from bore wells, 13% from the village
faucet and 9% from a spring. In Jiftlik the majority of
households - three-fifths -— take their household water supply
directly from the al Fara'a canal, a fifth from an outside
piped water supply, 2% from a source piped into the house, 9%
from bore wells, 3% from the village faucet and a further 5%
from the Israeli agricultural settlement of Masuah. A recent
ah
382 | arnan
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المنشئ
Alex Pollock

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