Webinar: Strategies for supporting collaborations, relationships for opening data in agriculture

24/01/2018

The free GODAN e-learning course on Open Data and Research Data Management in Agriculture and Nutrition focuses on how to deal with different types of data formats and uses, and on the importance of reliability, accessibility, interoperability and transparency of data 

This course is enriched by a number of Webinars designed to strengthen the course content, and to give course participants broader perspective in the relevant Open Data areas.

The GODAN Action team will offer similar programmes later in the year (2018). 

The Webinar "Strategies for supporting collaborations, relationships for opening data in agriculture"  - presented (by Ruthie Musker; @ruthiemusker on Twitter):

Webinar  SLIDES 

Related Webinars:
 

>>> What is GODAN? Network, Action & Secretariat

>>> Using Open Data 

 

P.S.

“Around the world, a movement called the “OPEN DATA revolution” is under way to make data available for public use.  This movement is expected to generate new insights, drive better decision-making, and enable governments, civil society, and the private sector to better target interventions and programs” (Open Data Revolution to Fight Global Hunger, USDA, 2017). But how can we better pin down different facets of, needed and desired features for Open Data (OD), and make them happpen? Find out more from this Open Data TOOLKIT

 
oversees GODAN’s Partner Network of over 600 partners including governments, industry, foundations, NGOs and farmer organizations. Her current projects include advising partners on overcoming Open Data challenges, advancing donors and universities Open Data policies and practice, creating implementation plans for governments to Open Data, improving the GODAN partner user experience, and developing a specific strategy to open nutrition data responsibly. She holds a bachelor’s degree from University of California, Los Angeles in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, and has performed ecology field research in California, Mexico, and Africa. She received a Master’s of Science from University College London in Environmental Conservation and received a Distinction on her Master’s thesis on information gaps in published materials of human-elephant conflict data. Before joining GODAN, she worked for the Agricultural Sustainability Institute at University of California, Davis and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich to assess resilience along agricultural value chains, by developing ontologies and standardized vocabularies, and analysing indicator metrics.

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