The future of population data

<p>In 1994, the ICPD agreed on a Programme of Action (PoA) that recognized the fundamental importance of population and development data for government planning and monitoring. It put a special emphasis on the need for more accurate data to define women&rsquo;s social and economic status,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cangiano, A
Other Authors: Kashyap, R
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: United Nations Population Fund 2024
Description
Summary:<p>In 1994, the ICPD agreed on a Programme of Action (PoA) that recognized the fundamental importance of population and development data for government planning and monitoring. It put a special emphasis on the need for more accurate data to define women&rsquo;s social and economic status, and stressed data disaggregation to understand and address the needs of people pushed furthest behind.&nbsp;</p> <p>Since then, recurring calls for improving data systems and capacities have echoed these recommendations. The United Nations Secretary-General recently called for a &ldquo;data revolution&rdquo; to equip all national governments with data systems to track and achieve the global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and related international commitments.&nbsp;</p> <p>In 2024, the thirtieth anniversary of the ICPD provides a moment to reflect on progress and gaps in population data and to outline key pathways to achieve future-ready data systems for the post- 2030 global development agenda.&nbsp;</p>