⇒ UNITED NATIONS Programmes
https://repository.oceanbestpractices.org/handle/11329/1964
2024-03-29T14:33:48ZData interoperability: A practitioner's guide to joining up data in the development sector.
https://repository.oceanbestpractices.org/handle/11329/1971
Data interoperability: A practitioner's guide to joining up data in the development sector.
González Morales, Luis Gerardo; Orrell, Tom
The Guide is structured around five areas that the Collaborative has collectively identified as being integral
to the development of more interoperable data systems at scale over time:
1. Interoperability, data management, and governance;
2. Canonical data and metadata models;
3. Classifications and vocabularies;
4. Standardized interfaces; and
5. Linked data.
The five areas covered by the Guide address some of the key dimensions needed to scale interoperability
solutions to macroscopic and systemic levels. The Guide has been developed as a practical tool to help
improve the integration and reusability of data and data systems. New sections, examples and guidance
will be added to the Guide over time to ensure its continued relevance and usefulness in this fast-evolving
space. Not all chapters will be relevant to all audience groups. We envisage that the introduction and first
chapter will be most relevant to those engaged in policy, management and planning work; with the
remaining four chapters being most relevant to technical specialists and statisticians across stakeholder
groups who are looking for specific guidance on how to improve the interoperability of their information
systems.
The Guide aims for clarity and accessibility while simultaneously exploring technically complex issues. This
is a difficult balance to strike but one that we have striven to maintain throughout, in some areas probably
more successfully than others. It is our hope that this corpus of knowledge and examples will grow in time
as the Guide matures from this first edition.
Each chapter concludes with sections entitled ‘Building a Roadmap’ and ‘Further Reading’. These are key
components of the Guide’s practical application. Collectively, the Roadmap components set out an
assessment framework that data managers in development organizations and government Ministries
Departments and Agencies (MDAs) can use to assess the degree to which their systems are interoperable
or not and where further action is required (see Annex A for further information). As with the Guide in
general, it is hoped that this assessment tool will be developed further in the coming years and applied
by organizations and institutions across stakeholder groups (drawing lessons from, and building on,
sectoral initiatives such as the Health Data Collaborative’s Health Information Systems Interoperability
Maturity Toolkit1).
The Collaborative on SDG Data Interoperability will continue to build and maintain the Guide as it develops
as a tool. Focus will shift to the development of additional modules and examples for the Guide as well as
the production of ancillary materials to help raise awareness of its existence and usability. It is hoped that
new synergies will form between data producers, publishers, users, and those providing capacity building
and training. In this way, the guidance set out within the Guide can be incorporated into existing training
materials and modules, and a consistent approach to the system-wide improvement of data
interoperability can start to become a reality in the development sector.
To find out more about the Collaborative on SDG Data Interoperability and how to contribute to the next
iteration of this Guide, please contact info@data4sdgs.org.
2018-01-01T00:00:00ZFoundational primer on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
https://repository.oceanbestpractices.org/handle/11329/1969
Foundational primer on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
This SDG Primer aims to establish a
common base of understanding and
approach for the UN system in supporting
the 2030 Agenda. It is primarily meant to
inform, in broad terms, the programmes
and actions of all UN entities, including
their engagement with government and
civil society partners.
2019-01-01T00:00:00Z