AUDIENCE POLL – QUESTION 1:
Q1: What type of organization are you representing?
- NGO/ charity/ Red Cross - UN/ government/ donor/ development bank- Private sector- Academia- Other
Please answer the pop up
survey to your right:
Speakers:Steve Hellen, Director, ICT4D & GIS, Catholic
Relief Services
John Mulqueen, MEAL Manager, Catholic Relief Services
Dr. Subhashini Chandrasekharan, Independent Consultant, Health Enabled
Abdul Bari Farahi, Technical Advisor, Mobile Solutions Technical Assistance and Research (mSTAR) Project, FHI 360
Moderator:
Sonja RuetzelICT4D Conference Manager,
Global Knowledge and Information Management,
Catholic Relief Services
AUDIENCE POLL – QUESTION 2:
Q2: What is your role in data management?
- Data collection/ generation- Analysis/ data models- Data processing- Storage/ database- Data advice/ compliance- Other
Please answer the pop up
survey to your right:
https://www.google.com/search?q=define%3A+data&oq=define%3A+data
https://www.google.com/search?q=define%3A+data&oq=define%3A+data
https://www.google.com/search?q=define%3A+data&oq=define%3A+data
https://www.google.com/search?q=define%3A+data&oq=define%3A+data
11
Elevate the Conversation
Rules, Tools & Schools
Support & Partnerships
Embed into Standard Practices
Art of the Possible
12
Elevate the Conversation
Rules, Tools & Schools
Support & Partnerships
Embed into Standard Practices
Art of the Possible
13
14
15
Elevate the Conversation
Rules, Tools & Schools
Support & Partnerships
Embed into Standard Practices
Art of the Possible
16
17
19
Elevate the Conversation
Rules, Tools & Schools
Support & Partnerships
Embed into Standard Practices
Art of the Possible
20
Costlow high
Predictabilitylow high
Suitability for Complex Effortslow high
Volunteers Interns StaffProfessional
Services
21
Elevate the Conversation
Rules, Tools & Schools
Support & Partnerships
Embed into Standard Practices
Art of the Possible
22
#1 Global Program Portfolio
23
#2 Data Co-Location
24
#3 Data Aggregation
25
Elevate the Conversation
Rules, Tools & Schools
Support & Partnerships
Embed into Standard Practices
Art of the Possible
AUDIENCE POLL – QUESTION 3:
Q3: Do you have responsible data policies and practices at your organization?
- Yes (have one)- Yes (helped built one for another organization)- Not yet, but we are implementing one- No, and not interested/ relevant
Please answer the pop up
survey to your right:
Responsible Data Practices for Digital
Development
Subhashini (Shubha) Chandrasekharan PhD
Consultant, HealthEnabled
Abdul Bari FarahiTechnical Advisor, Mobile Solutions Technical Assistance and Research
(mSTAR) Project, FHI 360
December 19, 2017
www.digitalprinciples.org
What does being Responsible with Data mean ?
Protecting Privacy
Data Security
Data Quality
Compliance
Openness
Good Data Management
Accountability
• Risks and benefits of data vary by context
• Vulnerability of Groups & Individuals to Harm is contextual
The Problem and the Opportunity
Data Use Creates Tensions
Granular data is more useful for analysis.
BUT granular data is more risky for privacy.
Aggregated data is a common way to protecting privacy.
BUT aggregated data is harder to re-analyze and reuse.
Interoperable and standards based datasets are great for openness.
BUT standard datasets make the de-identified data easier to reidentify (the mosaic affect).
Not collecting or retaining PII is useful for protecting privacy
BUT PII may be needed for security, accountability, and audit trails.
Accountability, audit trails PII Privacy loss
More useful for analysis Granular data Confidentiality loss
Protect privacy Aggregated data Harder to re-analyze/reuse
Openness, Reuse Interoperable data Re-identification easier
Public Good, Transparency Open Data Misuse/unintended use
Donor Government Implementing Partner
Community IndividualSociety
Benefit and Risks vary by Stakeholder
Need for Practice Guidelines
• No simple rules to follow
• Culture change around data and digital development
• Technology changes
• Real and perceived privacy & security risks
• Current practices are ad hoc, highly variable, and not standardized
• Different and evolving legal landscapes
• Limited relevant practical guidance from donors
RESPONSIBLE DATA PRACTICE GUIDELINES
USAID Stakeholder perspectives
Literature and Legal landscape analysis
Field-based digital development projects
A Framework for Responsible Data
• Principle-based
• Balanced
• Flexible
• Evidence-informed
• Forward looking
Considerations for Responsible Data Practices
Acknowledgements
U.S. Global Development Lab, Center for Digital Development, USAIDFHI360/ mSTARSonjara
AUDIENCE POLL – QUESTION 4:
Q4: What do you experience as the main challenge of implementing a responsible data policy?
- Lack of knowledge/ expertise- Awareness & behavior change- Lack of time - Other
Please answer the pop up
survey to your right:
Speakers:Steve Hellen, Director, ICT4D & GIS, Catholic
Relief Services
John Mulqueen, MEAL Manager, Catholic Relief Services
Dr. Subhashini Chandrasekharan, Independent Consultant, Health Enabled
Abdul Bari Farahi, Technical Advisor, Mobile Solutions Technical Assistance and Research (mSTAR) Project, FHI 360
Moderator:
Sonja RuetzelICT4D Conference Manager,
Global Knowledge and Information Management,
Catholic Relief Services
AUDIENCE POLL – QUESTION 5:
Q5: What ICT4D tools do you use to support your data-based decision making?
- Data collection tools- Analysis/ visualization- Storage/ database solutions- Other
Please answer the pop up
survey to your right:
http://www.ict4dconference.org/participate/call-for-speakers/
Conference Tracks:
- Agriculture & Environment
- Health & Nutrition
- Education & Livelihood
- Digital Financial Inclusion
- Humanitarian Response
- Collaboration & Openness in ICT
Plus ICT4D Training Day!
THANK YOU!
See you at the next ICT4D Webinar:
Blockchain for Development: Moving from Hype to Reality
Tuesday, 16 January, 2018
10th ICT4D Conference www.ict4dconference.org