Bronze level automatically awarded GB final
This data has achieved Bronze level on 28 October 2014 which means this data makes a great start at the basics of publishing open data.
The indicator measures the number of children who had been the subject of a Child Protection Plan continuously for two years or longer against the number of children ceasing to be the subject of a Child Protection Plan during the year, expressed as percentage
http://data.gov.uk/dataset/ni-064-child-protection-plans-lasting-2-years-or-more Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
Department for Communities and Local Government Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
originally created or generated by its curator Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
http://data.gov.uk/dataset/ni-064-child-protection-plans-lasting-2-years-or-more Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
UK Open Government Licence Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
UK Open Government Licence Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
no data about individuals Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
yes, and the rights are all held by the same person or organisation Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
no Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
http://data.gov.uk Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
http://data.gov.uk/api/rest/package/ni-064-child-protection-plans-lasting-2-years-or-more Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
machine-readable Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
title Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
description Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
release frequency Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
publisher Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
keyword(s) or tag(s) Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
distribution(s) Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
release date Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
modification date Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know