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Resources

Filter and search DI's published resources below. Or visit our Blog page for opinion, insight and comment, or see our Data page for tools and datasets.

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Showing 55-63 of 76 results

Discussion paper
20 December 2016

Using supply-chain data to improve the quality of public health services in Nepal

Gyan’s demand for data and information "We use data to ensure balance in stock levels so that adequate health supplies and medicines are made accessible al

Discussion paper
20 December 2016

Using data to reduce diseases, and improve healthcare, for children in Nepal

Discussion paper
20 December 2016

Using agricultural data to guide government’s food security efforts in Nepal

Discussion paper
15 December 2016

Metadata for open data portals

This paper investigates how open data portals share their metadata and explores the most prevalent underlying metadata standards used.

Discussion paper
23 November 2016

How can Data Catalog Vocabulary (DCAT) be used to address the needs of databases?

This paper aims to find a practical approach to applying DCAT to satisfy the needs of a portal that provides dynamic visualisations & a database that drives it.

Report
8 November 2016

Why was IODC2016 important for Joined-Up Data Standards?

In July this year we launched a consultation paper aimed at starting a discussion on what technical and political solutions to joined-up data challenges co

Discussion paper
5 October 2016

Using community-generated data to deliver and track the Sustainable Development Goals at the local level

The project, led by the Open Institute, with Development Initiatives working as the partner responsible for data quality and analysis, has begun with a pil

Background paper
19 July 2016

The P20: methods for tracking the status of people in the poorest 20%

Agenda 2030 is clear in its ambitions—everyone should be included in global progress over the next 15 years. But most discussions of progress focus on aggr

Discussion paper
28 June 2016

Household surveys: do competing standards serve country needs?

Our research finds that two-thirds of questions in the 2 most widely used household surveys are either identical or similar enough to be practically comparable.