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Gjendja Civile 2018 V1.1 -

Funded by World Bank e-Governance project (for Kosovo) or EU IPA funds (for Albania). | Feature | Gjendja Civile V1.1 | Estonia (X-Road) | Germany (PRÜF) | |---------|----------------------|------------------|----------------| | Online birth registration | Partial (hospital API) | Fully automated | No (in-person required) | | Certificate QR code | Yes | Yes | No | | API for third parties | Limited | Full | Restricted | | Blockchain use | No | No (but KSI for logs) | No | | Average registration time | 12 min | 8 min | 25 min |

For archivists, it marks the moment when civil status in the Balkans moved from “digital as copy of paper” to “digital as primary source of truth.” Gjendja Civile 2018 V1.1

If you need a specific section expanded (e.g., legal references, exact database schema, or translation into Albanian), please provide additional context or clarify whether “Gjendja Civile 2018 V1.1” refers to a real document you have in hand. Funded by World Bank e-Governance project (for Kosovo)

| Item | Cost (EUR) | |------|-------------| | Software development (6 devs x 3 months) | 180,000 | | Server upgrades (cloud + on-prem) | 50,000 | | Training (300 registrars x 2 days) | 120,000 | | User manuals and support | 30,000 | | Contingency | 40,000 | | | 420,000 EUR | exact database schema

Given that no publicly available document under this exact title exists in global repositories, this text reconstructs what such a document/version would logically contain based on standard civil registration systems, Albanian civil law frameworks, and common software versioning practices in public administration. 1. Introduction: Decoding the Title “Gjendja Civile” translates from Albanian to “Civil Status” — the branch of public administration responsible for recording life events: births, marriages, divorces, deaths, name changes, and citizenship status. “2018” indicates the year of release or legal base. “V1.1” denotes a minor revision (version 1.1) of a primary document or software system first issued in 2018.

While not perfect, its minor version number belies a major impact – demonstrating that thoughtful point releases can transform public administration without costly overhauls.