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Winners of the IDRC grants for research on OGP announced

Shreya Basu|

Earlier this summer we launched a call for proposals for research on OGP, with six mini-grants for the taking for ideas with the potential to inform the work of the Open Government Partnership. The rules were simple: the proposed research needed to shed light on cross-thematic or cross-country trends within OGP, explore correlations between progress on OGP and other development indicators, or provide new ways of thinking about how we can evaluate impact. Our main objective was to get the community mobilised to work on topics that haven’t been explored previously, using the wealth of OGP data that is now available, including the National Action Plans, IRM data and the OGP Explorer

The response was fantastic. We received over 55 proposals within a two week time frame on topics ranging from extractives, participatory budgeting, justice, linked open data and open parliaments to explorations of why OGP succeeds in certain countries and doesn’t do as well in others and the link between OGP and other international processes including the SDGs agenda.  Thank you to everyone who applied – it  was heartening to see so many interesting proposals on a whole variety of OGP topics. It did however make the job of the jury incredibly hard and meant that unfortunately, some really great ideas had to be turned down.  We’re very pleased to announce the names of the authors and paper titles of the six that were eventually selected after much deliberation.

  • Daniel Berliner from Arizona State University for his paper on ‘Ambitions and Realities in OGP Commitments:  Analysis of Commitment Completion Across Countries using Hierarchical Models.’
  • Sandra Elena from CIPPEC for her paper on ‘Promoting Open Justice: Assessment of Justice-Related Commitments in OGP National Action Plans.’
  • Rafael E. Valenzuela from Universidad Autónoma de Ciudad Juárez and J. Ignacio Criado and Edgar Ruvalcaba from Universidad Autónoma de Madrid for their paper on ‘Measuring the Impact of the Open Government Partnership in Member States using an Implementation Size Model.’
  • Adegboyega Ojo, Niall Ó Brolcháin, Edobor Osagie and Lukasz Porwol from the Insight Centre for Data Analytics, National University of Ireland Galway for their paper on ‘How can Open Government Partnership members bridge the “Commitment-Indicator” Gap for greater Return on Investment?’
  • Vinay Bhargava and Sarah Little from the Partnership for Transparency Fund for their paper on ‘Open Government Partnership and Sustainable Development Goal Number 16: Similarities and Differences.’
  • Vitus Azeem from the Ghana Integrity Initiative for his paper on ‘A Comparative Study of the OGP National Action Plans of Participating African countries.’

Of the six, Berliner, Elena and Ignacio et al’s papers were adjudged as the three best submissions and will be presented as lightning talks at the upcoming OGP Global Summit in Mexico.  So do stop by at their session if you are joining us in Mexcio. Over the next few weeks, each of the six grantees will also be blogging about their papers – their main findings and the opportunities their work presents for further research, advocacy or action.  Keeping watching this space for more!

A big thank you to jury members Jose Hernández Bonivento from GIGGAP, Fernando Perini from the International Development Research Centre, and colleagues from the Support Unit who helped review and select the winning entries, and congratulations from all of us to all the authors!

 

Open Government Partnership