Citizen respondents express their sentiments about engagement and participation in their governments' Open Data initiatives. Survey responses are broken down along several dimensions, including, Region, Education Level, Gender and Household (HH) Income.
Developers were asked: "When you can find the government data you need, how would you generally describe its accessibility and usability? Please rate the following statements." The statements deal with API access, data quality, documentation and other factors that make government data usable for developers.
Citizen respondents rank how they want to interact with and consume government data. Survey responses are broken down along several dimensions including, Region, Education Level, Gender and Household (HH) Income.
Developers were asked" "Which of these categories of data are important to you?" - these are their ranked choices, based on the % of developers who selected each category. (Note: the same categories of data were rated by citizens and government stakeholders)
Respondents who said, "yes, we have an open government mandate" were then asked if it was funded. Responses are tabulated by type of government showing the % of respondents in each group who selected, Yes, No, or Unsure.
All government respondents were asked to state to what extent they agree or disagree with 9 statements about Open Data/ Open Gov.
Responses are broken down by type of government.
Government respondents were asked about the state of civic participation and constituent engagement in their organization's open data initiative. Responses are grouped by type of government and are presented in % of respondents who selected each option. This questions was not a multi-select.
Respondents multi-selected between 6 choices to identify the main motivation for starting a data transparency initiative. Results can be grouped by country, type of government org and role of respondent. Choices included "no initiative" to account for those who did not have one.