Open Dataset of the Week: Citizens’ complaints
From comms officers to Mayors, there’s something for everyone.

Next, it could help monitor officials’ performance and quality of services. For city mayors, this could mean looking at agencies across the city - which one gets the most complaints?
At the federal level, senior officials can monitor and compare quality across cities. For Indonesia, this is becoming increasingly important as the President’s Office looks to expand its national complaints service, Lapor. The federal government has a new data plan to mandating cities to connect with Lapor, with Banda Aceh the first city to get on the plan .
All of this can be done by officials even if the data isn’t public. But making complaints data open is a great communications strategy. It lets citizens know that officials are working on the complaints they have raised, which could improve their trust in the government.
For example, Jakarta has colour coded its complaints based on their status - red for those that have not been responded to, yellow for the ones in progress, green for the ones that have been fixed.
Here are links to all of the open data on complaints from Indonesia:
Top image by BxHxTxCx, licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0