Highlights
- For OGD to fulfil its purpose, it ought to be assessible by, and useful to, ordinary citizens.
- Developed an OGD assessment tool called the ordinary citizen test
- Conducted a review of the extent of openness of OGD released by the UK government on data.gov.uk.
- Discovered that only a small minority of datasets on the data.gov.uk website is actually open data.
The claim of the open government data (OGD) movement is that it would add considerable value to the political, economic and social development of nations. Thus, during the past few years, governments around the world have been under increasing pressure to release data to encourage citizen participation in government.
In the UK, the government publishes its data on the data.gov.ukwebsite for the public to find, view, download and interrogate.
In this paper, we evaluate the extent of openness of OGD in the UK – a recognised global leader in the OGD movement – by examining a sample of 400 datasets listed on this website. The examination uses an ‘ordinary citizen’ test, which is developed based on the original eight Sebastopol principles of open data.
Our examination discovers that existing prevalent measures of openness of data are inadequate.
Our findings demonstrate that the majority of the published government resources on the website are informational rather than granular data.
In fact, only a small minority of these advertised as open data are actually open, which severely limits their open government utilities.
Full text (PDF 10pp)
NB: Explains the Sebastopol Principles
Labels:
open_government_data, open_data, data.gov.uk, ordinary_citizen_test, granularity,
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