Line 362: |
Line 362: |
| <h3 style="text-decoration:none;">[https://opendatacharter.net/ International Open Data Charter]</h3> | | <h3 style="text-decoration:none;">[https://opendatacharter.net/ International Open Data Charter]</h3> |
| <p>The Open Data Charter is a collaboration between over 150 governments and organisations working to open up data based on a shared set of principles. We promote policies and practices that enable governments and CSOs to collect, share, and use well-governed data, to respond effectively and accountably to the following focus areas: anti-corruption, climate action and pay equity.</p> | | <p>The Open Data Charter is a collaboration between over 150 governments and organisations working to open up data based on a shared set of principles. We promote policies and practices that enable governments and CSOs to collect, share, and use well-governed data, to respond effectively and accountably to the following focus areas: anti-corruption, climate action and pay equity.</p> |
| + | <p class="recco">Recommended by the Office of the CIO of Canada, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, a GC Data Community partner</p> |
| + | |
| + | <h3 style="text-decoration:none;">[https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/science-and-technology/oecd-digital-economy-papers_20716826 OECD Digital Economy Papers]</h3> |
| + | <p>The OECD Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) undertakes a wide range of activities to better understand how information and communication technologies (ICTs) contribute to sustainable economic growth and social well-being. The OECD Digital Economy Papers series covers a broad range of ICT-related issues and makes selected studies available to a wider readership. They include policy reports, which are officially declassified by an OECD Committee, and occasional working papers, which are meant to share early knowledge.</p> |
| <p class="recco">Recommended by the Office of the CIO of Canada, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, a GC Data Community partner</p> | | <p class="recco">Recommended by the Office of the CIO of Canada, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, a GC Data Community partner</p> |
| | | |
Line 384: |
Line 388: |
| <p class="recco">Recommended by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, a GC Data Community partner</p> | | <p class="recco">Recommended by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, a GC Data Community partner</p> |
| | | |
− | <!--<h2>Tools to try</h2> | + | <!-- *** TOOLS *** --> |
− | <h3 style="text-decoration:none;">This</h3> | + | |
− | <p>Description</p> | + | <h2>Tools</h2> |
− | <h3 style="text-decoration:none;">That</h3> | + | [[Image:Data-Ethics-Canvas.jpg|150px|The Data Ethics Canvas]] |
− | <p>Description</p>--> | + | <h3 style="text-decoration:none;">[https://theodi.org/article/the-data-ethics-canvas-2021/ The Data Ethics Canvas]</h3> |
| + | <p class="author">by Dave Tarrant, James Maddison, Olivier Thereaux</p> |
| + | <p>The Data Ethics Canvas is a tool for anyone who collects, shares or uses data. It helps identify and manage ethical issues – at the start of a project that uses data, and throughout. It encourages you to ask important questions about projects that use data, and reflect on the responses. The Data Ethics Canvas provides a framework to develop ethical guidance that suits any context, whatever the project’s size or scope.</p> |
| + | <p class="recco">Recommended by the Office of the CIO of Canada, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, a GC Data Community partner</p> |
| | | |
| <!--<h2>People to follow</h2> | | <!--<h2>People to follow</h2> |