@article {1534992, title = {Qualitative data sharing and synthesis for sustainability science}, journal = {Nature Sustainability}, volume = {3}, year = {2020}, pages = {81{\textendash}88}, abstract = {Socio{\textendash}environmental synthesis as a research approach contributes to broader sustainability policy and practice by reusing data from disparate disciplines in innovative ways. Synthesizing diverse data sources and types of evidence can help to better conceptualize, investigate and address increasingly complex socio{\textendash}environmental problems. However, sharing qualitative data for re-use remains uncommon when compared to sharing quantitative data. We argue that qualitative data present untapped opportunities for sustainability science, and discuss practical pathways to facilitate and realize the benefits from sharing and reusing qualitative data. However, these opportunities and benefits are also hindered by practical, ethical and epistemological challenges. To address these challenges and accelerate qualitative data sharing, we outline enabling conditions and suggest actions for researchers, institutions, funders, data repository managers and publishers.}, url = {https://www.nature.com/articles/s41893-019-0434-8}, author = {Steven M. Alexander and Kristal Jones and Nathan J. Bennett and Amber Budden and Michael Cox and Merc{\`e} Crosas and Edward T. Game and Janis Geary and R. Dean Hardy and Jay T. Johnson and Sebastian Karcher and Nicole Motzer and Jeremy Pittman and Heather Randell and Julie A. Silva and Patricia Pinto da Silva and Carly Strasser and Colleen Strawhacker and Andrew Stuhl and Nic Weber} }