Overview
The Information Management Network (IM Network) is an important component of the COD process. The IM Network can exist at country, regional and global levels and is composed of the humanitarian information management actors active in that country, region or at the global level. Potential IM Network actors include government, UN agencies and programmes, cluster IM staff, and international and national NGOs. If there is an OCHA office in the country the OCHA information management officer is responsible for establishing the IM network. however, OCHA does not have to be present for there to be an active IM Network.
The IM Network, as it relates to CODs, should have Information Management Officers (IMO) from OCHA, representatives or IMOs from clusters or sectors representatives (if these are not activated then agencies), technical staff from international and national NGOs, and ideally technical staff from relevant government agencies.
Possible partners include:
The role of the Information Management Network is to:
- Participate in the planning, identification, collection, processing, analysis, communication, and versioning of CODs
- Determine COD and prioritization of COD collection
- Endorse CODs
- Use and advocate for use of CODs and P-codes
Why is the IM Network important to the COD process?
Who can help
- Is there technical staff working outside of a country that can assist the IM Network with CODs?
Yes! There are several regional and global actors that can help a country level IM Network as they work on their CODs:
- OCHA Field Information Services in Geneva: can help with the overall process and help identify support
- Global level IMWG: can help identify CODs
- OCHA Humanitarian Data Exchange (HDX): can help with....
- ITOS: can help with processing administrative boundaries and populated places CODs
- MapAction: MapAction is a key partner for OCHA and all humanitarian organizations. MapAction staff in field quickly gather crucial data (including CODs) at the disaster scene, conveying it visually in the form of maps. By creating this ‘shared operational picture’ for aid agencies, governments and local partners, we can help them make informed decisions and deliver aid and emergency supplies to the right place, quickly.
- OSM: can help with..
- GIS Corp: ???? http://www.giscorps.org/ example of COD work http://docs.humdata.org/common-operational-datasets-for-the-european-refugee-and-migrant-response/#more-2680