Resources
Identity Use Cases & Scenarios.
FIDIS Deliverables.
Identity of Identity.
Interoperability.
D4.1: Structured account of approaches on interoperability.
D4.2: Set of requirements for interoperability of Identity Management Systems.
D4.4: Survey on Citizen's trust in ID systems and authorities.
D4.5: A Survey on Citizen’s trust in ID systems and authorities.
D4.6: Draft best practice guidelines.
D4.7: Review and classification for a FIDIS identity management model.
D4.8: Creating the method to incorporate FIDIS research for generic application.
D4.9: An application of the management method to interoperability within e-Health.
D4.10: Specification of a portal for interoperability of identity management systems.
D4.11: eHealth identity management in several types of welfare states in Europe.
Profiling.
Forensic Implications.
HighTechID.
Privacy and legal-social content.
Mobility and Identity.
Other.
IDIS Journal.
FIDIS Interactive.
Press & Events.
In-House Journal.
Booklets
Identity in a Networked World.
Identity R/Evolution.
Best Practice Method
The LSE’s researchers have developed and applied the Best Practice Method to assist institutions to build a framework of their operations and to design appropriate best practice procedures for improving performance,,. It aims to bring clarity to areas that are complex and inter-linked. It has adapted the method to incorporate issues such as:
The LSE’s researchers have developed and applied the Best Practice Method to assist institutions to build a framework of their operations and to design appropriate best practice procedures for improving performance,,. It aims to bring clarity to areas that are complex and inter-linked. It has adapted the method to incorporate issues such as:
Statutes and regulations
Risk assessments
Multiple disciplines within and between institutions
Compliance monitoring
Managing the sharing and exchanging of information
Roles and responsibilities of personnel
Integration of the activities of the institutions involved
Developing best practice procedures
The method is separated into four domains, as shown in Figure 2, namely the requirements domain; the business modelling domain; the information management principles domain; and the system specification domain. In FIDIS these domains cover all aspects of identity management.
Figure 2
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