SDG Indicators and Data : Who collects ? Who reports ? Who benefits ?

/sdg-indicators-and-data

  • SDG Indicators and Data: Who collects? Who reports? Who benefits? | Global Policy Watch

    https://www.globalpolicywatch.org/blog/2015/11/23/sdg-indicators-and-data

    By Barbara Adams

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    As part of its mandate to develop an indicator framework by which to monitor the goals and targets of the post-2015 development agenda, the Inter-agency and Expert Group on SDGs (IAEG-SDGs) held its second meeting in Bangkok, 26-28 October 2015. The objective was to seek agreement on the proposed indicators for each target—keeping in mind that indicators alone can never be sufficient to fully measure progress on the goals. More specifically, it was to move provisional indicators marked yellow—needing further agreement—to either green—agreed by all parties—or grey—no agreement possible. As a result, there are now 159 green indicators (including 52 moved from yellow and 9 new ones), and 62 greys (including 28 moved from yellow plus 5 new ones).

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    SDG indicators: Counting the trees, hiding the forest | Global Policy Watch
    https://www.globalpolicywatch.org/blog/2015/11/11/sdg-indicators-counting-the-trees-hiding-the-forest

    by Roberto Bissio

    After a two days meeting in Bangkok, at the end of October, the statistical experts of the UN agencies have come with a controversial list of 159 “generally agreed” indicators to measure the Sustainable Development Goals approved last September by the UN.

    Traditionally, development agencies have tried to summarize in a single indicator or index complex development goals. Thus, UNICEF emphasized infant mortality as a proxy indicator of its mandate to protect children, the World Bank has traditionally equated development with per capita income, and UNDP enriched that idea with its Human Development Index based on a larger but still reduced set of indicators. Those single figures were considered to correlate so closely with other relevant indicators (for example infant mortality correlates with child underweight) that they were considered as useful to represent broad trends, progress or regression, in realities that everybody understood as being complex.

    #développement #sdg