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GRI_Government response index, daily

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Source(s) used: Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker, Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford. Donwloaded from
the Covid-19 Government Response Tracker on 09/02/2023
Citation Guidelines:
All data are free for scientific use only. For any other use, please contact the data producer directly to obtain authorization. Please cite the database as follows:
Generations and Gender Programme (Year). Generations and Gender Contextual Database. Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (distributor). Retrieved from: https://www.ggp-i.org/data/ggp-contextual-database/ on Day/Month/Year
If the data downloaded from the GGP Contextual Database comes only from one source (e.g. Eurostat), you might cite it as follows:
Original Source [e.g. Eurostat, © European Union, 1995-2019] (Data obtained through the Generations and Gender Contextual Database. Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (distributor). Retrieved from: https://www.ggp-i.org/data/ggp-contextual-database/ on Day/Month/Year)
The Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker also recommends the following citation for academic publications:
Thomas Hale, Noam Angrist, Rafael Goldszmidt, Beatriz Kira, Anna Petherick, Toby Phillips, Samuel Webster, Emily Cameron-Blake, Laura Hallas, Saptarshi Majumdar, and Helen Tatlow. (2021). 'A global panel database of pandemic policies (Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker).' Nature Human Behaviour. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-021-01079-8
Indicator (long name): Government response index Indicator (short name): GRI Definition: The index records how the response of governments has varied over all indicators in the database, becoming stronger or weaker over the course of the outbreak. It is calculated using all ordinal indicators. The index spans 0-100. It is a measure of how many of the relevant indicators a government has acted upon, and to what degree. The index cannot say whether a government's policy has been implemented effectively. Comments: Note that these indices simply record the number and strictness of government policies, and should not be interpreted as 'scoring' the appropriateness or effectiveness of a country's response. A higher position in an index does not necessarily mean that a country's response is 'better' than others lower on the index.
Source of variable definition: Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker, Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford.
Available here. Last accessed on on 10/02/2023
Reference areas: Click here to download the list of reference areas and the respective geographical codes.