international aid transparency initiative-iati
[2]
languages
[30]
libya-floods
[22]
literacy
[49]
livelihoods
[412]
logistics
[236]
malaria
[240]
malnutrition
[54]
markets
[150]
maternity
[428]
men
[71]
mental health
[255]
migration
[177]
morocco-earthquake
[18]
mortality
[356]
natural disasters
[77]
needs assessment
[395]
non-food items-nfi
[48]
nutrition
[747]
openstreetmap
[33]
operational capacity
[163]
operational partners
[64]
operational presence
[147]
opt-israel-hostilities
[44]
peacekeeping
[93]
people in need-pin
[113]
points of interest-poi
[395]
populated places-settlements
[681]
population
[567]
ports
[407]
poverty
[474]
protection
[310]
railways
[409]
refugee crisis
[75]
refugees
[418]
returnees
[95]
rivers
[433]
roads
[473]
rural
[4]
sahel
[4]
services
[433]
severe acute malnutrition-sam
[31]
severity
[25]
sex and age disaggregated data-sadd
[81]
shelter
[99]
social media data
[10]
socioeconomics
[1169]
stateless persons
[224]
survey
[236]
sustainable development
[239]
sustainable development goals-sdg
[699]
topography
[40]
trade
[461]
transportation
[2187]
urban
[7]
vaccination-immunization
[244]
water sanitation and hygiene-wash
[676]
west africa
[42]
who is doing what and where-3w-4w-5w
[510]
women
[234]
youth
[248]
LessMore
Licenses:
CC BY 3.0 IGO
[178]
Creative Commons Attribution International
[7789]
Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike
[321]
Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike
[18]
Creative Commons Attribution for Intergovernmental Organisations
[3010]
Multiple Licenses
[7]
ODC-ODbL
[13]
ODbL
[204]
Open Data Commons Attribution License (ODC-BY)
[27]
Open Data Commons Public Domain Dedication and License (PDDL)
[3]
Open Database License (ODC-ODbL)
[4856]
Other
[3385]
Public Domain
[194]
Public Domain / No Restrictions
[422]
UN-Habitat’s urban datasets are made available under the Public Domain Dedication and License v1.0 whose full text can be found at: http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
[166]
A weekly dataset providing the total number of reported political violence, civilian-targeting, and demonstration events in Yemen. Note: These are aggregated data files organized by country-year and country-month. To access full event data, please register to use the Data Export Tool and API on the ACLED website.
The IPC Acute Food Insecurity (IPC AFI) classification provides strategically relevant information to decision makers that focuses on short-term objectives to prevent, mitigate or decrease severe food insecurity that threatens lives or livelihoods. This data has been produced by the National IPC Technical Working Groups for IPC population estimates since 2017. All national population figures are based on official country population estimates. IPC estimates are those published in country IPC reports.
The IPC Acute Food Insecurity (IPC AFI) classification provides strategically relevant information to decision makers that focuses on short-term objectives to prevent, mitigate or decrease severe food insecurity that threatens lives or livelihoods. This data has been produced by the National IPC Technical Working Groups for IPC population estimates since 2017. All national population figures are based on official country population estimates. IPC estimates are those published in country IPC reports.
This dataset contains data obtained from a variety of sources and transformed into a form suitable for driving the Ukraine Data Explorer. The visual itself is driven by a JSON file which contains the same data as the resources in this dataset which point to published csvs from a Google spreadsheet.
This dataset contains two APIs with daily COVID-19 Trends and Impact Survey data. The University of Maryland API is for accessing global survey data and CMU API is for accessing US survey data.
In 2015, the World Health Organization established the Attacks on Health Care (AHC) initiative. This initiative is a priority of WHO’s Health Emergencies Programme. The vision of the initiative is that essential lifesaving health services must be provided to emergency-affected populations unhindered by any form of violence or obstruction. The Surveillance System for Attacks on Health Care (SSA) is one of the outputs of this initiative. The purpose of the WHO Surveillance System for Attacks on Health Care (SSA) is to systematically collect and make available data on attacks on health care, and their immediate impact on health care in countries facing emergencies.
Definition of attack
WHO defines an attack as any act of verbal or physical violence, threat of violence or other psychological violence, or obstruction that interferes with the availability, access and delivery of curative and/or preventive health services.
Criteria for determining the level of certainty of an attack on health care
Rumour
Social media post (Twitter or Facebook) OR
Hearsay OR
Form submission from anonymous source
Possible
Media report from local or international news source OR
Communication from an organization not defined in the partner group that an attack has been made against them
Probable
One eyewitness accounts of the attack as told to one or more SSA partner OR
Two secondary accounts (not eyewitnesses) of the attack as told to one or more SSA partner(s)
Confirmed
Communication from an SSA partner that an attack has been made against them OR
One eyewitness account by someone from the SSA partner group OR
Two eyewitness accounts of the attack as told to one or more SSA partner(s) OR
Types and sources of information that would be graded as ‘Probable’ PLUS-A photo, video or satellite image of the attack or its aftermath, or an international media or police report that provides clear evidence of the attack
World Bank Indicators of Interest to the COVID-19 Outbreak.
This link is to a collection in the World Bank data catalog that contains datasets that may be useful for analysis, response or modelling.
This layer contains airports locations. This dataset brings together various public sources such as OpenStreetMap or ourairports.com with WFP logistics information. It is updated regularly with inputs from WFP aviation unit but also from many partners through the Logistics Cluster and the Logistics Capacity Assessment (LCA: dlca.logcluster.org). The information is compiled at a global level by the Emergency and Preparedness Geospatial Information Unit at the World Food Programme (WFP) Headquarters in Rome, Italy.
This dataset is at a global scale and is updated country by country. The last update date can be retrieved from the data of the country of interest.
This dataset shows the current IPC AMN period (October 2022–May 2023) analysis. The acute malnutrition situation has deteriorated further in GoY-controlled areas when compared to the same period in 2022. This is due to a combination of factors; severe food insecurity, low immunization coverage, poor access to health and WASH services and increased disease incidences.
Contains data from the World Bank's data portal covering the following topics which also exist as individual datasets on HDX: Agriculture and Rural Development, Aid Effectiveness, Economy and Growth, Education, Energy and Mining, Environment, Financial Sector, Health, Infrastructure, Social Protection and Labor, Poverty, Private Sector, Public Sector, Science and Technology, Social Development, Urban Development, Gender, Millenium development goals, Climate Change, External Debt, Trade.
Flood footprint of historical events at a 200m x 200m resolution based on the cloud to street database with events ranging from the years 2002-2018 (see https://floodbase.com). The events have been processed into one hazard dataset per country.
'Our World in Data' is compiling COVID-19 testing data over time for many countries around the world. They are adding further data in the coming days as more details become available for other countries. In some cases figures refer to the number of tests, in other cases to the number of individuals who have been tested. Refer to documentation provided here.
The Global Violent Deaths (GVD) database integrates indicators on the major causes of lethal interpersonal and communal violence—intentional and unintentional homicides, killings in legal interventions, and direct conflict deaths—and combines them in a single violent deaths indicator. These indicators are also reported in a disaggregated format by the sex of the victim and perpetration mechanism, namely firearm killings. The GVD database tracks this information across 222 countries and territories worldwide yearly from 2004 and reports both crude counts and rates per 100,000 population. The input data is retrieved from reliable sources, such as governments, national and international organizations, trusted non-governmental organizations, and verified media outlets. Missing data points are estimated using the methods described in this document.
The GVD database is updated annually by the Small Arms Survey, an associated programme of the Geneva Graduate Institute, which strengthens the capacity of governments and practitioners to reduce illicit arms flows and armed violence. This is done through three mutually reinforcing activities: the generation of policy-relevant knowledge, the development of authoritative resources and tools, and the provision of training and other services. The GVD database benefits from financial support from governments and organizations, and notably its core donors, who are publicly disclosed online. The Small Arms Survey follows rigorous procedures to ensure that the input data, the applied methods, and the results are of reasonable quality. If the user encounters apparent errors, they should contact us via email at media@smallarmssurvey.org.
Regions, sub-regions, countries, and territories are defined based on the classification system used by the UN Statistical Division (2013 revision), except for Kosovo, England and Wales, Northern Ireland, and Scotland. The names and designations reported in the database do not imply any sort of endorsement by the Small Arms Survey.
This dataset contains agency- and open source events published in the Attacks on Health Care News Brief. Categorized by country.
Please get in touch if you are interested in curated datasets: info@insecurityinsight.org
See here for data supporting the Safeguarding Health in Conflict Coalition (SHCC).