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Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 IGO
All materials provided on this website are copyrighted under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 IGO license. This International Governmental Organizations license was developed under the auspices of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) and has been adopted by a number of other international organizations, such as CERN, ILO, OECD, WHO, UNESCO and the UN.
The following is a summary of the Creative Commons IGO license, explaining the terms of use of the materials on this website. For the full legal code, please click here.
You are free to:
Share — copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format
Adapt — remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially.
Conditions:
Appropriate Credit
You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate where changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but in no way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.
Principles
The use of these materials should comply with the principles outlined in the United Nation Charter . By way of example and not as a limitation, when using these materials, you shall not do any of the following:
- Defame, abuse, harass, stalk, threaten or otherwise violate the legal rights (such as rights of privacy and publicity) of others;
- Publish, post, distribute or disseminate any defamatory, infringing, obscene, indecent or unlawful material or information;
Latest available Data
When requesting the data to be incorporated in internal servers, you must ensure you are providing the latest available data and comply with updates. The entire series of Human Development Index (HDI) values and rankings are recalculated every year using the same methodology, the most recent data. and updated time series.
We also strongly recommend the following text to accompany the publication of the HDI dataset, particularly in print publications:
"The entire series of Human Development Index (HDI) values and rankings are recalculated every year using the same the most recent (revised) data and functional forms. The HDI rankings and values in the 2014 Human Development Report cannot therefore be compared directly to indices published in previous Reports. Please see hdr.undp.org for more information.
The HDI was created to emphasize that people and their capabilities should be the ultimate criteria for assessing the development of a country, not economic growth alone. The HDI can also be used to question national policy choices, asking how two countries with the same level of GNI per capita can end up with different human development outcomes."
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