Skip to content

Can you #IATI that for me? (2)

The IATI Standard  lets you publish information on your organisation’s activities and money flows. But how would you write something in IATI? The first case already showed different ways to do things. Here’s the second case, coming from an AidStream workshop with NGOs in the Partos IATI programme.

iati2.jpg

Our organisation, called Us, is going to publish data in IATI. We found out that our organisation identifier is  zz-us.

  • We’re a membership organisation, with three member organisations who each pay €5,000 annually.
  • We run Project 1, for which we receive funding from  Donor A (€20,000). We also put €5,000 of our own money into the project.
  • For the project, we work together with Partner X. It’s a network of freelancers and small businesses, with one  Affiliate Y who is being paid from the project.
  • We do most of the implementation of the project with our own staff.

Some observations and questions:

  1. Based on the previous example, we’ll add a “core activity” again for our incoming membership dues.
  2. If we’re mostly doing the work in projects ourselves, do we add ourselves as implementing organisation to each activity? Since there will always be some work involved on our end, when do we include ourselves as implementing organisation?
  3. We don’t have transactions with Partner X, but with their  Affiliate Y. Do we include the Affiliate as implementing organisation or the Partner, or both?
  4. Related to that: a payment to Affiliate Y could be seen as  expenditure or as  disbursement. Is there a relation between organisation roles and types of transactions?

Reflection on IATI

If we consider IATI a language (and not as a database format, which it isn’t), we’ve got to look at both sides of  communication. A “publisher” writes out a sentence to describe a situation. A “data user” looks at this sentence, and tries to understand what the situation is. Different ways to express yourself give freedom to the publisher, but make it harder for the data user.

As Bill was saying in reply to the last case: “At the end of the day it is up to the publisher to decide what story they want to tell.”

Although I’d love to see even IATI poetry (just as sometimes code reads like poetry to a programmer), clear and unambiguous communication benefits from agreements on how to express something. I hope discussing various ways to represent concrete situations in IATI will help grow common practices and eventually lead to conventions that give guidance to publishers and make re-use easier for data users.

Your advice

Share your advice for the organisation above, as code or guidelines! Comments are moderated, so may not show immediately, but are highly appreciated.