International Open Data Charter | |
Abbreviation: | ODC |
Type: | Set of principles and practices and surrounding organization |
Purpose: | Collaboration to promote governmental open data |
Language: | various |
Remarks: | We want a world in which governments collect, share, and use well-governed data, to respond effectively and accountably to our most pressing social, economic, and environmental challenges |
The International Open Data Charter is a set of principles and best practices for the release of governmental open data. The charter was formally adopted by seventeen governments of countries, states and cities at the Open Government Partnership Global Summit in Mexico in October 2015.[1] The original signatories included the governments of Chile, Guatemala, France, Italy, Mexico, Philippines, South Korea, the United Kingdom and Uruguay, the cities of Buenos Aires, Minatitlán, Puebla, Veracruz, Montevideo, Reynosa, and the Mexican states of Morelos and Xalapa.[2] As of 2020, 74 national and local governments are signatories.[3]
The charter mandates[4] that data released by governments comply with these principles:
New Zealand joined the Open Data Charter in 2017. The charter supports and builds on the New Zealand Declaration on Open and Transparent Government https://www.ict.govt.nz/guidance-and-resources/open-government/declaration-open-and-transparent-government/ and the Data and Information Management Principles https://www.data.govt.nz/manage-data/policies/new-zealand-data-and-information-management-principles. The goals of New Zealand are to enforce its commitment to open data, ensure it remains internationally aligned, and provide government agencies with a more modern and clear articulation of principles and supporting actions for accelerating the release of open government data.[5]