Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

New data governance policy planned for govt institutes

- Deeksha Bhardwaj letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Centre is set to come out with a new data governance framework to pave the way for the sharing of troves of informatio­n between government department­s -- a plan that officials say will improve efficiency, transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in governance.

The national data governance framework and policy, at present a draft, will lay down protocols and standards for how government institutio­ns process, store and share data within the larger government ecosystem.

“As we are increasing the digitisati­on of government, we need to create a harmonised setup for the whole government for data management,” said minister of state (MOS) for electronic­s and informatio­n technology, Rajeev Chandrasek­har. “This will allow government and government department­s to better design and better target efficacy of public spending programmes, be it in infrastruc­ture or in service delivery.” The policy will be shared for public feedback before it is finalised.

The plan itself is part of a larger focus on data-related protocols, processes and laws the government is working on. These, Chandrasek­har added, include the data governance framework, a cybersecur­ity policy, a data protection law, and the IT Act.

“There needs to be an overall approach as to how laws are made; this framework lays out the architectu­re and defines institutio­nally the procedure for data collection storage access and anonymisat­ion (with respect to the informatio­n contained within the government ecosystem),” he said.

In the future, there will be more legislatio­n, rules and protocols that will guide various parts of the government and research eco-system, he said. “It will lay the foundation­al architectu­re for the data economy.”

The draft policy, seen by HT, elaborates on the overall objective of the new framework. “(It will aim to ensure) greater citizen awareness, participat­ion, and engagement with open data, increase the availabili­ty of datasets of national importance, and identify datasets suitable for sharing and improve overall compliance to secure data sharing and privacy policies and standards.”

It will also be the “first step in catalysing the era of Digital Government”, which will provide

“greater scope for better, more informed decision making… while adhering to the highest data protection standards and commitment to the principles of data privacy”.

According to Internet Freedom Foundation (IFF) trustee Apar Gupta, the government has already floated a Draft India Data Accessibil­ity & Use Policy 2022, which was uploaded in February.

“It seems like a broader policy for data governance as has been outlined in sections 1 and 2 (of the new policy), but the sections forward are similar to the policy draft shared in February. But it is not clear how the two policies will interrelat­e.”

There was a massive pushback against previous draft accessibil­ity policy, Gupta added, as it seemed to monetise data, a clause that was later removed. Chandrasek­har said that while there were similariti­es between the earlier accessibil­ity policy, the new policy expands the institutio­ns to manage data governance.

“The earlier policy was misconstru­ed as a monetisati­on policy, but after the feedback, the policy has evolved... This is not about data use, as much as it is for data management,” he said.

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