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Taxonomies for Development

File(s)
Taxonomies_for_Development.pdf (419.2 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/87745
Collections
International Publications
Author
Serrat, Olivier
Abstract

{Excerpt} Organizations spend millions of dollars on management systems without commensurate investments in the categorization needed to organize the information they rest on. Taxonomy work is strategic work: it enables efficient and interoperable retrieval and sharing of data, information, and knowledge by building needs and natural workflows in intuitive structures. Bible readers think that taxonomy is the world’s oldest profession. Whatever the case, the word is now synonymous with any hierarchical system of classification that orders domains of inquiry into groups and signifies natural relationships among these. (A taxonomic scheme is often depicted as a “tree” and individual taxonomic units as “branches” in the tree.) Almost anything can be classified according to some taxonomic scheme. Resulting catalogs provide conceptual frameworks for miscellaneous purposes including knowledge identification, creation, storage, sharing, and use, including related decision making.

Date Issued
2010-09-01
Rights
Required Publisher Statement: This article was first published by the Asian Development Bank (www.adb.org).
Type
article

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