When COVID-19 hit the Gambia, the government was well-prepared to respond effectively. Thanks to a private-public sector project, anonymized big data from cellphone towers allowed policymakers to analyze migration patterns by tracking population.
Phones to the rescue! Household survey implementation under COVID and beyond worldbank.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from worldbank.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Making data and statistics more inclusive in developing countries
Young Asian woman with smiling face sitting in the wheelchair. plo/Shutterstock.com
Measuring disability through household surveys and population censuses is challenging and there is not a gold standard approach. In censuses or surveys, disability is often captured through questions on functional difficulties (e.g. seeing, hearing), activities of daily living (e.g. bending, bathing), broad activity limitation (e.g. inability to work due to a health condition) or a general question (“do you have a disability?”).
In 2017, the United Nations Statistical Commission adopted revised guidelines for the collection of disability data in national censuses (United Nations 2017). The Commission recommends that the following four functional domains be considered essential in determining disability status in a way that can be reasonably measured using a census and that would be appropriate for international comparison: (a) W
Maps to the future: How can soil map data be used by smallholder cocoa farmers? worldbank.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from worldbank.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Supporting water and disaster risk management in Mozambique using Google Earth Engine
Cyclone Eloise just hit Mozambique’s Sofala coastal province at the end of last month, displacing thousands of people and ruining crops
[1]. The authorities are still gauging the full extent of the damage by severe winds and heavy rains across the rest of the region, but this is nothing that Mozambique has had to face for the first time. Throughout its history, the country has coped with a succession of cyclones and floods and has been repeatedly exposed to disastrous events in recent years.
Mozambique’s geographic position, location, and size leave the country vulnerable to extreme and complex hydrological hazards