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  • Why create a data dictionary?

    A data dictionary describes your data. It describes the choices made about column names, codes, methods, or sampling. It enables anyone to better find, understand, reuse,…

  • Why do we need Ngā Tikanga Paihere?

    To address the inequities suffered by Māori and other minorities, research must include strong participation with the community of focus and meet the data related obligations of Te Tiriti o Waitangi and human rights considerations.

  • What is open data?

    What is open data? Learn about the open data toolkit, open licences, open accessibility, and human- and machine-readability.

  • Copyright

    Copyright material on the data.govt.nz website is Crown Copyright and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence.

    Note that this licence does not apply to…

  • We need your help - test a design option

    Thanks to everyone who participated in the card sort. Three design options have been created based on your feedback, and now we need you to test to determine the final structure.

  • Data Summit'18 - it's a wrap!

    More than 250 data warriors, policy peeps, and those from across government, NGOs, business, and academia who want to know more about data, gathered in Wellington to talk data ethics.

  • Thanks for your input: October 2017 data.govt.nz community feedback results

    Our data and performance analyst reviews the results from the first data.govt.nz community feedback survey. Find out what users want and how we're planning to improve data.govt.nz.

  • Infoshare

    Infoshare, a self-service open online data tool on Stats NZ’s website, contains over 30 million aggregated, confidentialised, time-series data.

  • 5 tips to opening your data

    You've seen the pronouncements about the volumes of data that power the world around us and that this is increasing exponentially. But where’s all this data coming from?

  • Open by design

    "Open by default" is a term bandied around when talking about open data policy. I find the phrase often helps lift the barriers rather than bring them down but if...

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