The state of open humanitarian data : what data is available and missing across humanitarian crises
2020
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TitreThe state of open humanitarian data : what data is available and missing across humanitarian crises
AccèsFull text: stateofdata2020 - PDF ;
Résumé
As we start 2020, just over 50 percent of relevant crisis data is available across 14 humanitarian operations. Afghanistan and the Central African Republic have the most complete data, while Venezuela has the least. The largest data gaps are in the categories for health and education, and food security and nutrition. The categories with the best coverage of data include affected people, and geography and infrastructure.
1. Introduction -- 2. Key messages -- 3. Global overview -- 4. Completeness by location, by category, by sub-category -- 5. Completeness by location and category -- 6. Completeness by location and sub-category -- 7. Country deep-dive: Afghanistan -- 8. Contributing organizations -- 9. Data for modeling -- Annex A. Data grid sub-category definitions -- Annex B. Data grid criteria for assessing completeness.
1. Introduction -- 2. Key messages -- 3. Global overview -- 4. Completeness by location, by category, by sub-category -- 5. Completeness by location and category -- 6. Completeness by location and sub-category -- 7. Country deep-dive: Afghanistan -- 8. Contributing organizations -- 9. Data for modeling -- Annex A. Data grid sub-category definitions -- Annex B. Data grid criteria for assessing completeness.
DateThe Hague : United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) Centre for Humanitarian Data, Jan. 2020
Description
17 p. : graphs, maps, tables
Notes
Includes bibliographical references.