Over 1,000 data experts from more than 100 countries have pre-registered for the Forum, including from national statistical offices, data scientists from the private sector and academia, international organizations, and civil society groups, as well as political leaders and sustainable development advocates. Speakers will be posted online at UNdataforum.org as they are confirmed.
The Forum, which will be held at the Cape Town International Convention Center, will be a unique opportunity for major producers and users of data and statistics to collaborate, launch new initiatives, and innovative solutions to deliver better data on health, education, income, environmental indicators and other aspects of sustainable development.
In more than 100 sessions and parallel events, ranging from data labs and interactive knowledge-sharing spaces, to more traditional keynote speeches and panel discussions, all participants will have a platform to contribute their ideas.
“I am confident that the first 缅北禁地World Data Forum will generate fruitful collaboration across the statistics and data communities, and cutting edge practical solutions to current challenges,” said Mr. Wu Hongbo, 缅北禁地Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs, who heads the Secretariat for the Forum.
“I also hope it will boost political and financial support and partnerships for improving statistics and data capacity in many countries, to harness the power of data for the public good and the implementation of the 2030 Agenda.”
Innovative approaches
Among many points of discussion, the Forum will feature presentations and data labs focusing on a number of innovative solutions, including:
- How using mobile phones and online interviews can improve the accuracy and cost-effectiveness of gathering data, based on experiences in Africa and Latin America.
- How high-res satellite images can be used to map poverty and measure soil fertility and crop yields.
- How call records and other sources can be used to gather better data on migration and refugees.
- How open data can improve the productivity of African agriculture, showcasing practical lessons learned from an 8-year public-private partnership, the Africa Soil Information Service, including ways to incorporate new technologies such as crowd-sourcing, remote sensing and drones.
- How involving mobile carriers, banks and social media companies in partnerships can generate new, large-scale data sources.
- How civil society groups are using data to talk to governments about citizens’ experiences and priorities, and how this can build accountability and change policy.
Other plenary sessions and panels will focus on core issues agreed by the organizing committee, including:
- A new look at how to harness the data revolution for sustainable development;
- Rethinking how to build official statistical capacity in those countries where it is needed, encouraging new commitments and collaborations;
- Integrating new data sources and big data innovations into existing structures, and how to facilitate data sharing and collaboration across sectors;
- Counting minorities and vulnerable groups and improving gender data so that we “leave no one behind” and ensure the protection of human rights; and
- Understanding the world through data: data visualization, literacy and journalism.
Improved use of data and statistics will be crucial to achieving the transformational vision of a better future for people and the planet, set out in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development agreed by world leaders at the 缅北禁地in September 2015.
Better data is needed to track progress and inform policy decisions from the local to the global levels. Rapid expansion in new sources of data is creating large-scale opportunities for innovative solutions, which need to be integrated with strengthened official data mechanisms and structures.
The first 缅北禁地World Data Forum will be hosted by the Government of South Africa and Statistics South Africa, with support from the Statistics Division of the 缅北禁地Department of Economic and Social Affairs.
A number of partners – including governments, the World Bank, UNICEF, and several civil society organizations and research institutes – are collaborating to organize the Forum.