Data Sharing

**What is it?

Data sharing, simply, is making data available to another party. This could include sharing with a partnering environmental non-profit, a researcher at a university, a community group, or a government agency.

Examples of environmental data sharing include:

Real success stories that involve data sharing and collaboration include:

Why does it matter?

Sharing data enables communities that have environmental data to build partnerships, inform their neighbors and region, and analyze information and impact over time.

While there are benefits to sharing, there are also risks: environmental data can be used by bad actors to misrepresent, draw inappropriate conclusions about, or otherwise harm communities. Concerns include: surveillance from mobile sensors, extractive research practices, or selectively slicing data for misrepresentation in media. Fortunately, there are tools to create safeguards when sharing data, including licenses, data sharing agreements, and various data governance models that can protect environmental data while ensuring its value can be used for and by the community.

How-to

For a more detailed exploration of how to consider data sharing with your team, see our zine: Zine - The Data We Own: A How-To Guide for Environmental Data Sharing.

Mentioned and additional resources: