Aotearoa NZ Cabinet endorsed several policies to support open government and the release of open data. Those policies, alongside several open data-related principles, can help you lift your open and transparent use of data.
The Declaration on Open and Transparent Government was made by Cabinet in 2011. It sets out a government-wide approach to increasing the openness and transparency of the Aoteaora NZ government, by actively releasing high-value public data it collects and holds on behalf of taxpayers.
The Declaration on Open and Transparent Government
The New Zealand Data and Information Management Principles (NZDIMP) are a set of seven principles under which the New Zealand government releases its open data.
The principles state that data should be:
Unless there are identifiable reasons for its release, personal and classified data remains protected. Government data and information should also be trusted and authoritative.
New Zealand Data and Information Management Principles (NZDIMP)
New Zealand signed up to the International Open Data Charter in 2017. The charter supports and builds on the New Zealand Declaration on Open and Transparent Government and the supporting Data and Information Management Principles.
The charter has six principles and supporting actions. Data should be:
Applying these principles and actions will:
Principles — International Open Data Charter
Adoption of the International Open Data Charter
If you’d like more information, have a question, or want to provide feedback, email datalead@stats.govt.nz.
Content last reviewed 20 August 2020.