FAO Country Profiles
FAO Country Profiles

Geopolitical information

The FAO geopolitical ontology and related services have been developed to facilitate data exchange and sharing in a standardized manner among systems managing information about countries and/or regions.

The geopolitical ontology ensures that FAO and associated partners can rely on a master reference for geopolitical information, as it manages names in multiple languages (English, French, Spanish, Arabic, Chinese, Russian and Italian); maps standard coding systems (UN, ISO, FAOSTAT, AGROVOC, etc); provides relations among territories (land borders, group membership, etc); and tracks historical changes.

In addition, in order to facilitate the exploitation of this reference data by information systems, various services have been developed on top of this resource:

Geopolitical ontology overview

The geopolitical ontology has been populated using FAO, UN and internationally recognized data sources.

The geopolitical ontology manages the following information:

Area types1:

  • Territories: self-governing, non-self-governing, disputed, other
  • Groups: geographic, economic, organizations, special groups

Data associated to areas:

  • Names (official, short and names for lists) in Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Spanish, Russian and Italian.
  • International codes: UN code – M49, ISO-3166 Alpha-2 and Alpha-3, UNDP code, GAUL code, FAOSTAT, AGROVOC and FAOTERM
  • Coordinates: maximum latitude, minimum latitude, maximum longitude, minimum longitude
  • DBPedia ID
  • Currency names and codes
  • Adjectives of nationality
  • Basic statistical data: country area, land area, agricultural land area, population and GDP

Relations:

  • Groups membership
  • Land borders
  • Historic changes: predecessor, successor, valid since2, valid until3

The geopolitical ontology is available for download in OWL format. It is also available in RDF format so that the content of the ontology is easy to explore and navigate.

The use of the ontology is governed by the FAO copyright. For any queries regarding the content, sources or use please contact .


Example

Partial representation of the geopolitical ontology:
Example Russian Federation


Glossary

Ontology: A description of a given domain, expressed by means of a standardized language. The geopolitical ontology is implemented in Ontology Web Language (OWL) 1.0 language, which is a W3C standard. Ontology is a term borrowed from philosophy that refers to the science of describing the kinds of entities in the world and how they are related. An OWL ontology may include descriptions of classes, properties, instances. All these objects are called resources.

Domain: The particular area of interest modelled by the ontology.

Class: A collection of objects sharing the same definition, e.g. “area”. For example, the class “area” is defined as having names to use in different context, codes, etc (corresponding to the properties “hasShortName”, “hasOfficialName”, “code” ). Classes may be organized hierarchically, as in the case of “area”, superclass of the classes “group” and “territory”. The classes “group” and “territories” are said subclasses of “area”.

Instance: An individual belonging to a given class, e.g. “Argentina” is an instance of the class of territories that are “self-governing”. Instances of a class have specific values for the properties defined at the class level.

Property: Any attributes of the object described. Properties may be of two types: datatype properties and object properties. Datatype properties are used to describe “simple” properties, expressed by means of literals or numbers. Object properties are used for attributes whose value is an instance of another class. Properties may be organized hierarchically, as in the case of the property “code”, with subproperties “CodeAGROVOC,” “CodeFAOSTAT” etc. The property “code” is said superproperty of “CodeAGROVOC” and “CodeFAOSTAT.”


1 In cases where an area (territory or group) changed in time but kept the name, the ontology differentiates the two areas by sub-fixing the name of the obsolete one with the year (e.g. “FAO 2006”). The year indicates the beginning of validity of that particular area.

2 The value of the datatype property "validSince" gives the starting year of validity of the area (territory or group) it is associated with. The geopolitical ontology traces back historic changes only until 1985. Therefore if an area has a validSince = 1985, this indicates that the area is valid since 1985 or before.

3 The value of the datatype property "validUntil" gives the last year of validity of the area (territory or group) it is associated with. In case the area is currently valid, this value is set by default to 9999.


FAO Disclaimer

Information on the FAO Country Profiles portal is provided as and when available. The designations employed and the presentation of information do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area, or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. FAO makes every effort to ensure, but does not guarantee, the accuracy or completeness of and declines responsibility for any loss, damage, liability or expense suffered which is claimed to result from its use.


Geopolitical ontology

RDF version
download OWL
Web services

Previous versions

OWL Version 1.0
-> about this version
OWL Version 0.9 (beta)
-> about this version

Articles

Linked Open Data for the Food and Agriculture Country Profiles
Linked Open Data for the Food and Agriculture Country Profiles

FAO's Geopolitical Ontology and Services
FAO's Geopolitical Ontology and Services

Wikipedia
Semantic Universe

FAO sources

AGROVOC
FAOSTAT
FAOTERM
Global Administrative Unit Layers (GAUL)

Other sources

International Organization for Standardization (ISO)
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
United Nations Statistics Division (UNSD)



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