Founder of Orodata Science, Blaise Aboh has emerged winner of the Quartz’s Atlas for Africa competition.
Blaise’s winning prize is a ten-day, nine-night trip to New York City to visit Quartz’s offices, and to Washington, D.C. to visit ICFJ’s offices.
He will meet with journalists similarly obsessed with data visualization and participate in some training.
Orodata Science, a civic technology organization that studies and leverages data-driven science, methods, processes, and systems in order to provide insights that support transparency, accountability, citizen engagement and informed decision making.
Orodata also enables governments at the federal, state, and local levels to improve their capacity to communicate reform initiatives, actions, policies, and programs using simple visual language for stakeholders and citizens.