How I Use World Bank Data: Researching Access to Electricity

abernard102@gmail.com 2014-03-21

Summary:

" ... In 2012, when I was interning at the Development Research Center of the State Council, I had the opportunity to read the newlypublished China 2030: Building a Modern, Harmonious, and Creative Society. I was fascinated by its comprehensive data, rigorous analysis and innovative conclusions, especially its rich empirical statistics. This also aroused my curiosity – I was keen to discover the powerful databases that support this report.   While writing a paper about the areas without electricity, I tried to conduct an empirical study of these areas from the perspective of comparative politics. Lack of data of other countries made the work difficult. Then the World Bank’s databases came to mind, and I went to the World Bank’s Open Data site to try my luck. To my happy surprise, in the Environment category, what caught my eye first was 'Access to electricity (% of population).' Although the data only covers about 80 countries for the two years of 2009 and 2010, it was sufficient to support my comparative study of countries. With the help of this data set, I successfully completed my paper ... Since then, I have become a frequent user of the Bank’s Open Data site, whose vast data reserve, easy-to-use and efficient search functions, as well as its user-friendly interface, have made me so eager to dive deeper and deeper into the 'sea of knowledge.'  Database service is a new type of service that emerged with the knowledge economy.  In many ways, it represents a higher level of information service. The World Bank’s Open Data has facilitated development, generation, organization, dissemination and use of knowledge, and the 'positioning' of researchers across different countries, thereby significantly improving the efficiency and quality of our research.  To me, the Bank’s Open Data site is – like navigation lights – powerful and irreplaceable, guiding the 'ship of research' toward success ..."

Link:

http://blogs.worldbank.org/opendata/comment/reply/707

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.comment oa.worl_bank oa.data oa.green oa.repositories

Date tagged:

03/21/2014, 08:28

Date published:

03/21/2014, 04:28