In a series of tweets today, the Foundation welcomed the launch of the new data strategy by the UN Secretary General. As we noted on Twitter, the new data strategy echoes and embraces a number of guiding principles & core pillars of the UN Crisis Information Management Strategy that the Foundation supported and facilitated for close upon a decade, from 2007 to 2016.
As documents pegged to the process over nearly ten years clearly bring out, as well as the systemwide stocking at the UN done in 2017 also underscores, data was considered to be at the very heart of the UN’s mission and mandate.
A note penned to UN Assistant Secretary-General Fabrizio Hochschild after a meeting held at the UN Secretariat in New York in early 2018 also clearly spelt out the importance of data as well as how, at the operational, planning and management levels, it could play a role, including in crisis preparedness, management and response.
The Foundation looks forward to working with colleagues at the UN, many of who were part of the Crisis Information Management process, and now also co-lead this new data strategy.
#ICT4Peace welcomes the @UN Secretary-General's new data strategy https://t.co/9vUd9krIhk A UN ecosystem that better leverages data was guiding pillar of #UN crisis information management strategy we facilitated/supported for nearly decade https://t.co/KDwKQngjal pic.twitter.com/4BT7rEPTEu
— ICT4Peace Foundation (@ict4peace) June 29, 2020
A #UN-wide stocktaking exercise late-2017/early-2018 which fed into a meeting at the Secretariat in New York https://t.co/E3rJZEisD8 underscored the importance of data in all aspects of the UN's operations. Read PDF https://t.co/OaVrEDssge pic.twitter.com/OthjEEJnvj
— ICT4Peace Foundation (@ict4peace) June 29, 2020
Note to UN ASG @HochschildF prefigures number of points in UN SG's new data strategy, which we are pleased also embraces imp. of data-driven approaches to monitor & combat #hatespeech. We look forward to supporting @goodnotes & valued UN colleagues in this timely roadmap & work. pic.twitter.com/Ca7sMSbzfT
— ICT4Peace Foundation (@ict4peace) June 29, 2020