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Open Aid Partnership Update on Open Aid Partnership & Country Implementation Johannes Kiess World Bank Innovation Labs World Bank Group/International.

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Presentation on theme: "Open Aid Partnership Update on Open Aid Partnership & Country Implementation Johannes Kiess World Bank Innovation Labs World Bank Group/International."— Presentation transcript:

1 Open Aid Partnership Update on Open Aid Partnership & Country Implementation Johannes Kiess World Bank Innovation Labs World Bank Group/International Monetary Fund Annual Meetings October 12, 2013

2 Turning Aid Reporting Upside Down
For the first time Bolivia is putting its development projects on a map – government reported data, not donor reported Map shows that donor projects are relatively well aligned with poverty Darker colored districts shows higher poverty level All data will be public in an IATI format on the new Open Aid Partnership website and on the governments own website (built on the same open source Open Aid Map platform, financed by the OAP) Bolivia: Country-owned development data at the subnational level

3 Turning Aid Reporting Upside Down
Data According to eProMIS in Kenya

4 Malawi Aid Management Platform
Rural Development Projects are close to roads Access to water (one of MDGs) and water projects

5 Understanding where donors work
Open aid maps can inform donor collaboration and understanding of where different donors work This map was produced for the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and World Bank President Jim Yong Kim joint trip to the Great Lakes Region in May Combining and visualizing World Bank and UN geocoded data representing a part of their broader commitment to work more closely together The map shows World Bank and UN agency portfolios in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) Portfolios compliment each other. UNDP is mostly in the fragile areas in east, and the World Bank in high poverty areas in the west World Bank Group, UNDP, UNOPS, UN-Habitat Operations in the DRC

6 Visualizing both internally and externally financed projects
This map is a first draft, fresh from the press, that shows internally and externally financed projects in Bolivia at the provincial level. Bolivia has the data down to the municipal level. More will be shown later in the Bolivian presentation. Shows by province the share of donor financing, e.g. this province has high donor share, and this high government share. Support integration of budget data, including a platform to visualize internally and externally financed data, is the next thing we want to focus on in Bolivia. Public and donor expenditure in Bolivia

7 Exciting Citizens About Open Development Data
Data Literacy Bootcamps in Malawi, Nepal, and Bolivia 3-day intensive open data bootcamps held in Bolivia, Malawi and Nepal during June 2013 More than 300 participants from civil society, academia, the media and tech communities Trained participants to extract, clean, and visualize data, and use open data to build tools that empower citizens Trainers from Kenya went to Nepal and Malawi and shared experiences from Kenya Open Data Initiative and Code4Kenya Bootcamps in Bolivia and Malawi connected over Skype

8 The Way Forward Two additional focus countries: Aid dependent, high donor fragmentation, fragile and/or conflict-affected and complimentary to USAID / AidData activities Current focus countries (Bolivia, Kenya, Malawi, Nepal): Additional demand side activities: OAP workshop for policy makers, Data Literacy Bootcamps Deepening the supply of open development data: Integration of budget data, Open Contracting, Open Aid Map New focus countries: 15 countries supported by USAID, implemented by Development Gateway. Alex will talk about it more later. 2 new countries for the OAP. Fragile states with high aid dependency. Right now exploring opportunities with Afghanistan, Myanmar, Central African Republic, Sierra Leone and other countries. Other upcoming events: October 12, during CSO Forum: Panel with representatives from Bolivia, Kenya, ONE and Publish What You Fund. October 25: Event together with Publish What You Fund during Transparency Week. Speakers around the globe will give a series of short presentations demonstrating the power of using open development data to inform decisions and improve results. The session will be broadcasted online from Washington DC, Nairobi, Lilongwe, La Paz, Kathmandu and other locations.


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