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OpenDuka
Open Duka is a project designed by the Open Institute that will provide a freely accessible database of information on Kenyan entities. This information will provide citizens, journalists, and civic activists with a practical and easy-to-use tool to understand the ownership structure of the world they live in, demonstrating the practical applications of open information for normal citizens. It will serve as a core dataset for citizens, journalists, and civic activists who want to build 3rd party public transparency and public accountability apps or services, by allowing them to cross reference the Open Duka company shareholder data against other datasets.Sabasi
Sabasi Application is a data collection tool developed by the Open Institute. This project is still in its initial stages. In future, this application is intended to simplify the collection of data using mobile smart phones and improve availability of data especially in Africa. You're welcome to fork and collaborate with us to make it better and more efficient. All suggestions are welcome.OpenCounty
Farmers-Data
This dashboard was created to show case data collected by farmers in Nakuru North in Nakuru county in Kenya. This helps us to quickly analyse their data using different filtering mechanism on the filters pageKCPETrends
Thousands of students sit for their Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE) exams every year. Discover the performance records of schools, districts and counties in Kenya from 2006 to 2011.DevolutionHub-V2.0
Kenya Devolution Hub provides a comprehensive source of publications on the devolution of government in Kenya. Provided by the community of stakeholders working on the various thematic areas related to devolution & sub-national governments, it organises content from disparate sources in way that is easier to find and share resources. Devolution was a key feature of the Constitution of Kenya 2010 and came into force upon promulgation of the constitution. The glide path included the formation of institutions, the passing of various laws and after the March 2013 elections, 47 sub-national governments each led by a Governor and his Deputy. Each county also has a County Assembly with elected, was well as nominated members, making up the house. Each assembly is led by a Speaker and functions as an arm of the devolved government making legislation and exercising oversight over the executive. The journey so far has resulted in the production of research, policy briefs, articles and handbooks addressing a broad range of issues many of which are part of the devolved functions explicitly described in the Fourth Schedule of the Constitution of Kenya 2010. This portal aggregates this work, produced by various stakeholders including governments, into a single space for ease of discoverability and sharing. Organised by county, by devolved function and by source, you can find information related to any of the devolved functions and the counties which they address. The platform is both an online space and a community of practitioners working on devolution in Kenya. As a platform it features architecture that is primarily web-based and driven by standards compliant technology to allow content to be moderated, updated with ease and for users to be added and managed. As a community, Kenya Devolution Hub has a governance mechanism formed by participating civil society organisations who support the moderation of content and ensure quality assurance. Users can also rate the content so that the community can find content that is rated high on quality. To contribute content, simply create an account and follow the instructions. Our Partners Kenya Devolution Hub is made possible by the organisations providing content, those providing human resource and those providing funding. Key partners include the World Bank, and Open Institute.Love Open Source and this site? Check out how you can help us