# Measuring human rights violations from an ecological perspective using a locally generated instrument: a cross-sectional study of Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank

**Authors:** Rita Giacaman, Rula Ghandour, Weeam Hammoudeh

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1557817 · Frontiers in Public Health · 2025-05-22

## TL;DR

A survey of Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank found that 60% experienced human rights violations, with differences by gender and location, highlighting the role of family, community, and occupiers.

## Contribution

The study introduces a locally developed survey tool to measure human rights violations from an ecological perspective, including family and community as potential perpetrators.

## Key findings

- 60% of participants reported exposure to at least one human rights violation.
- Women were more likely to report family-perpetrated violations, while men reported more from the Palestinian Authority and Israeli military.
- Residents in Area C and those with lower education or poorer backgrounds reported higher odds of experiencing violations.

## Abstract

This study presents findings from a cross-sectional household survey conducted among Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank to assess the reported prevalence of human rights violations committed by various potential perpetrators.

We used a context-specific tool developed from the ground up using qualitative methods to enhance our understanding of what Palestinians consider to be human rights violations. This tool aligns with our conceptualization of potential perpetrators, which includes the family, the community, the Palestinian Authority, and the Israeli military occupier and colonizer of Palestinian land.

Overall, as many as 60% of participants reported being exposed to one or more human rights violations, with the most frequently reported being restrictions on mobility, safety, freedom, and the exercise of political rights. Regression analysis revealed that women were more likely to report violations perpetrated by the family compared to men, whereas men were more likely to report violations by the Palestinian Authority and the Israeli military occupier. Palestinians living in Area C, fully controlled by Israel and where illegal Israeli settlements on confiscated Palestinian land are located, had higher odds of reporting experiences of general human rights violations, alongside those committed by the Israeli military occupier, the Palestinian Authority, and the family. Participants with lower educational levels and those from poorer backgrounds had higher odds of reporting human rights violations by all offenders.

This study underscores the importance of considering the family and community as potential human rights perpetrators and highlights the significance of using mixed methods in research to ground findings in participant experiences. Particularly during wartime, as violence permeates daily life, the combination of violations from family, community, government, and military occupiers is likely to be synergistic, exacerbating the experienced suffering and making life increasingly difficult to endure. This may also lead to significant negative impacts on health, whether physical or mental, as health is fundamentally a social and political construct.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** human rights violations (MESH:C535682)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

65 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12137323/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12137323