GLIDE numbers are the identifiers for humanitarian crises used UN agencies, IFRC, and many other partners. Because multiple organisations can create GLIDEs independently, there is often confusion over which ones to choose for best interoperability.
The UN’s humanitarian office (OCHA) is now publishing a live list of the subset of GLIDE numbers it uses for information management and financial tracking:
https://data.humdata.org/dataset/unocha-glides
(Direct CSV download: https://proxy.hxlstandard.org/data/39a48b/download/unocha-glide-numbers.csv)
This list is available online independently of any outages at the main GLIDEnumber.net site, and we encourage IATI reporters to use these codes (when available) with the humanitarian-scope element for their humanitarian activities.
Absolutely, Andy. This is a curated subset based on two criteria:
Because GLIDEs are semi-crowdsourced with a closed group of contributors, the full database ends up with duplicates, different levels of detail (e.g. one national crisis split up into multiple subnational), etc.
This isn’t meant as a replacement for GLIDEnumber.net, but it will cover all of the major crises over the past few years, and will also help ensure that any GLIDEs you use in your IATI reporting will be the same ones UNOCHA (and partners) are using.
We still hope that GLIDEnumber.net will become more stable soon. It remains the official source of all GLIDEs.
D