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Reflections on Priority Research Needs

Reflections on Priority Research Needs. Ronald C. Schoenmaeckers CBGS – Population and Family Study Centre. Who am I?. Socio-demographer (which means that I am a sociologist who later also became a demographer);

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Reflections on Priority Research Needs

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  1. Reflections on Priority Research Needs Ronald C. Schoenmaeckers CBGS – Population and Family Study Centre

  2. Who am I? • Socio-demographer (which means that I am a sociologist who later also became a demographer); • Some experience in census undertakings as associate expert/expert/CTA in Mauritania, Burundi, Togo, Chad; • Have been a country monitor with the DHS • Have some experience with the analysis of Belgian census data (fertility); • Have recently been involved in the development of the projdoc of the RGPH 2003 in Madagascar

  3. “Cost reduction” … is not necessarily “spending less money”; Can also be interpreted as making the census operation • More efficient • More attractive • More worthwhile…

  4. And I would immediately add more worthwhile not just for this relatively small club of statisticians and demographers (note that I am “counting myself in”), but to a whole lot of stakeholders – in fact to the entire community.

  5. The core of my talk … • Will not be on ‘innovative’ new technologies; • Is not based on an in-depth analysis or a paper (in fact there is none); • But will be my personal view as a sociologist/demographer who has spent a large part of his career in a multidisciplinary environment (the CBGS) and who has some experience in census undertaking in Africa

  6. Furthermore… • The talk will partly be based on what I’ve heard in the last 2-3 days; • And what I will say is especially applicable I believe in countries which are in no position to cover all census expenditures on their own, but need the assistance of the international donor community

  7. Let me start by reminding the different phases of a census operation…

  8. The cost of a census, distributed by ‘operation’

  9. The most expensive census operations obviously are • Census mapping (35%); and • Data collection (45%) The least expensive ones are • Data processing (9%); and • Data analysis (12%)

  10. My basic argument to make an increase of the census cost acceptable would be to say that the census is a tool for socio-economic development (implying that it is not the sole domain of statisticians and demographers)

  11. Of course we know that the census is a basic statistical operation, but… • In saying this we should not just think about the ‘technical’ meaning of this (e.g., baseline for further surveys); • We should also underline the fact that census and survey operations are complementary (totals and indicators vs explanatory power); and…

  12. Convince stakeholders that in fact a census is a very efficient tool/opportunity to underline the need for an integrated approach; • hereby underlining that they have common interests; • that they need to work together; • that, through the census they all in their specific way contribute to increase the ‘well-being’ of the population; • in sum … to a better life for all.

  13. Children Population ageing Women/gender issues Poverty Cf. the new thematic themes of Richard Dackam Eradicate poverty and hunger Achieve universal primary education Reduce child mortality and maternal mortality ratio (reproductive health) Combat AIDS Ensure environmental sustainability Cf. the Millennium Development Goals already presented by Graham Eele How to achieve this?By including in the data analysis ‘new’ subjects such as

  14. In fact, in doing so We would be doing no less than to contribute implementing the objectives of the International Conferences organized by the UN during the last decade: • Environment/Agenda 21 (Rio, 1992) • ICPD (Cairo, 1994) • Social Summit (Copenhagen, 1995) • Women’s rights (Beijing, 1995) • Habitat II (Istanbul, 1996)

  15. It is to expected that the explicit dealing with these ‘new’ themes will attract the interest of other specialized UN agencies next to UNFPA and UNDP to the census undertaking, such as: FAO, ILO, UNESCO, UNICEF, WFP, WHO, … • Their collaboration can be insured through the recently created UNDAF-initiative (UN Development Assistance Framework), especially created for the implementation of joint development programmes

  16. Of course the inclusion/analysis of new themes will create extra cost. However, it can be hoped for that the additional budget requirements (and even more) will be borne by the ‘new’ stakeholders. • It needs to be realized that this ‘new’ collaboration will only fully work on the condition that the new partners participate in the census from its earliest stages (projdoc, budgetary allocations, time frame, …) • Hence the importance of fully understand the complexities of a census operation … (see next)

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