[PDFlist] Media Release: UNICEF and SPC partner to improve data for children, women and people with disabilities across the Pacific islands
Soloveni Vitoso
infor at pacificdisability.org
Mon Aug 27 22:37:56 MDT 2018
[cid:image002.png at 01D43EE8.5DE328D0] [cid:image004.png at 01D43EE8.5DE328D0]
UNICEF and SPC partner to improve data for children, women and people with disabilities across the Pacific islands
28 August 2018
SUVA, Fiji - Today, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and The Pacific Community (SPC) announced a new partnership to support the strengthening of data collection and data analysis to improve the lives of the most vulnerable children, women and people with disabilities across the Pacific islands and territories.
The collection and dissemination of reliable data of children and women worldwide is vital to identify and plan for their needs and to inform policies.
UNICEF Representative, Sheldon Yett, said, "Statistically sound and internationally comparable data is essential for the targeting of resources to reach the Sustainable Development Goals and meet the needs of the most vulnerable. We welcome this partnership with SPC, which will work towards ensuring that global best practices are in place for data collection and analysis for women and children in the Pacific."
Through the collection of quality data, decision-makers are able to make positive change by identifying needs and monitoring progress in their countries. Quality data is essential for measuring a country's progress against the Sustainable Development Goals and currently in the Pacific islands, there is a lack of data to accurately measure this progress.
Highlighting the potential impact of this agreement for the Pacific, SPC's Deputy Director General, Audrey Aumua, said, "Good policy is formed on a foundation of good data. Through this agreement, SPC and UNICEF will be able to better support the work of Pacific leaders to improve the lives of women and children across our region."
The new UNICEF-SPC partnership aims to support Pacific island governments to:
* Improve the quality and standards of data collection for children, women and people with disabilities
* Analyse and utilize new and existing data to report and monitor the situation of children, women and people with disabilities; and
* Disseminate statistics, engage stakeholders and advocate for the collection and use of statistics in policy formulation.
This new initiative is aligned to the joint UN Data, Monitoring and Evaluation Group, established in Fiji and Samoa, which coordinates efforts to improve data collection, analysis and utilization for evidence based decision making and policy development in the Pacific islands and territories.
The 2017 World Bank Statistical Capacity Indicator reports that the Pacific Island countries rank significantly below the Asia-Pacific regional average and that the Pacific needs to improve specifically on health and poverty surveys as well as vital registration systems. Insufficient or no data risks leaving children behind on critical issues such as improving health, sanitation, education, and protecting children from violence, abuse and exploitation.
Regional initiatives, such as the Ten Year Pacific Statistics Strategy (TYPSS), seek to address some data collection challenges, however, despite these efforts, greater attention is needed to produce regular statistics on marginalised populations, including children, women and people with disabilities.
About UNICEF
UNICEF works in some of the world's toughest places, to reach the world's most disadvantaged children. Across 190 countries and territories, we work for every child, everywhere, to build a better world for everyone. For more information about UNICEF and its work for children, visit www.unicef.org<http://www.unicef.org>.
Follow UNICEF Pacific on http://www.unicefpacific.org/ Twitter<http://twitter.com/UNICEFPacific> and Facebook<https://www.facebook.com/likeunicefpacific>
About the Pacific Community
The Pacific Community (SPC) is the principal scientific and technical organisation in the Pacific region, proudly supporting development since 1947. We are an international development organisation owned and governed by our 26 country and territory members. For more information about our work, visit www.spc.int<http://www.spc.int>
For more information, please contact:
UNICEF Pacific: Cate Heinrich, cheinrich at unicef.org<mailto:cheinrich at unicef.org>, +679 9925 606
SPC: Michael Sharp, michaels at spc.int<mailto:michaels at spc.int>, +687 916095
To subscribe to SPC's news mailing list, click the link below:
http://lists.spc.int/mailman/listinfo/press-releases
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.pacificdisability.org/pipermail/pdflist_lists.pacificdisability.org/attachments/20180828/7a762500/attachment.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image002.png
Type: image/png
Size: 19728 bytes
Desc: image002.png
URL: <http://lists.pacificdisability.org/pipermail/pdflist_lists.pacificdisability.org/attachments/20180828/7a762500/attachment.png>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image004.png
Type: image/png
Size: 13454 bytes
Desc: image004.png
URL: <http://lists.pacificdisability.org/pipermail/pdflist_lists.pacificdisability.org/attachments/20180828/7a762500/attachment-0001.png>
-------------- next part --------------
An embedded and charset-unspecified text was scrubbed...
Name: ATT00001.txt
URL: <http://lists.pacificdisability.org/pipermail/pdflist_lists.pacificdisability.org/attachments/20180828/7a762500/attachment.txt>
More information about the PDFlist
mailing list