Celebrating Open Data Day
Open Data Day [https://opendataday.org/] is an annual, global
celebration of open data. The event looks to promote the benefits of
open data and showcase its use to improve government, business, and
civil society. This year, events were organised around the world, with
33 of the 153 registered events taking place in Europe. 

In the Danish city of Odense, for example, enthusiasts held an online
event about how to best map the cycling infrastructure in Denmark
[https://www.vejdirektoratet.dk/nyhed/2022/2022-er-cyklens-aar].
Denmark has plenty of incentives to develop cycling data. The country
is hosting the first three stages of the 2022 Tour de France, and the
government has also invested nearly EUR70 million in new cycling
infrastructure. 

On a different track and considering civil society, in Barcelona,
organisers combined the frameworks for Open Data Day and Women’s Day
to lead a discussion on gender issues in open data. Made real by the
GenderDataLab [https://www.genderdatalab.org/], a debate was
facilitated on how to best disaggregate open data by sex and gender to
support research and analysis of gender issues that can feed into
social change.

While the event is over, the Open Data Day site continues to provide
ideas, resources and data sources [https://opendataday.org/#resources]
for those looking to further work on open data in a variety of fields.
 

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Publication Date/Time
2022-03-25T15:05:01+00:00
People from around the world gathered on 5 March 2022