A detailed set of guidelines for creating a steady state data flow map
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,…
Each year we invite users of data.govt.nz to complete a short survey about their experience using this website.
New Zealand has several pieces of policy that have been endorsed by the Cabinet to support open government and the release of open data. These policies and principles are helpful to understand to support agency discussions relating to opening up data and improving transparency.
This draft guide provides a high-level comparison of the data and information management principles in the New Zealand context, and applies a value lens to the principles.
In January 2019, we published the content strategy and style guide for data.govt.nz. We'd love to get your feedback.
A draft checklist of the things you should consider before releasing open data.
A first-of-its-kind report provides valuable insights into the use of algorithms in government agencies.
This style guide helps us keep the voice, tone, and messaging consistent across data.govt.nz. It specifies both general and specific rules and instructions for grammar, punctuation,…
If you collect information about people you may get requests to correct that information. Knowing your responsibilities and having a system for managing corrections will improve data quality and ensure your legal responsibilities are fulfilled.