Many thanks to everyone for the rapid thinking COVID-19.
I have two issues which have led me to consider three further options for classification.
Issues
Classifying Using Text
I don’t think this should be a formal method of classifying relevant activities - at least not on its own.
Although I absolutely encourage all publishers to be descriptive with project titles, there are legitimate reasons not to include “COVID-19”. There could be an existing convention of naming activities based on the country office they’re based in; it could be that the project has been named based on contractual or partnership details; it could be that the work is looking at the virus, not the disease.
To be clear, I think that using this approach will absolutely be helpful, but that it is not sufficient on its own.
Lack of Non-Humanitarian Classifications
In the linked guidance, it’s acknowledged that not all COVID-19 related projects will be humanitarian. Indeed, DFID is likely to have a mixture of hum / non-hum responses, as the pandemic touches all aspects of our work.
However, I presume it’s not best practice to use <humanitarian-scope>
in a non-humanitarian activity. Although I can’t find any formal rule saying as much, intuitively I would only look for this element in activities where @humanitarian
is true.
To allow for robust (non-statistical - see below) classification, I think one of the following three options needs to be endorsed by us as a community, and by the secretariat as a steward. I’ve very possibly missed something here, so shout if so.
Options
Personally I recommend either Option 1 or Option 2, given my reluctance to use a <humanitarian-scope>
element in non-humanitarian activities.
Option 1
Include GLIDE Codes as entries on the TagVocabulary codelist and recognise the following use of the <tag>
element using it
This would allow for any activity that is relevant to be tagged in the following way:
<tag vocabulary="1-2" code="EP-2020-000012-001" vocabulary-uri="https://glidenumber.net/glide/public/search/search.jsp">
This assumes that the entry would have the same vocabulary @code
as it does on the HumanitarianScopeVocabulary codelist)
Unambiguous
Official
Requires (small) edit to the standard, which might take a bit of time
Not strictly necessary, given Option 2
Option 2
Recognise the following use of the <tag>
element, declaring GLIDE as a custom vocabulary using code 99, 98, 97, etc.
<tag vocabulary="99" code="EP-2020-000012-001" vocabulary-uri="https://glidenumber.net/glide/public/search/search.jsp">
Unambiguous
Require no change to the standard
Extensible approach - this can be done with any codelist with a unique URI
Depends on the vocabulary URI not changing, or being redirected if it does
More susceptible to typos!
Option 3
Endorse the use of <humanitarian-scope>
elements in activities which do not have @humanitian='1'
Require no change to the standard
Ambiguous
Possibly confusing
More susceptible to typos!
I’d argue that the humanitarian scope, tag, and sector should have been <classification>
elements all along
What about quantification?
In theory, it could be that people know exactly how much of a given activity is being budgeted, committed and spent on COVID 19. If so, we could use the approach of Option 2 above to refer to it in the element, as long as we could agree a ‘null’ value to pad the sector and ensure that it sums to 100 for that vocabulary. I’m planning to trial a similar approach with cross-government spending through International Climate Finance, and I’m interested to hear people’s thoughts.