11 Jan 2018
PCRN featured in GovInsider: 19 Pacific countries building a single civil registration network
TAGS

19 island countries in the Pacific are working together to build a single civil registration network, so that data on vital events are accurately captured and shared across their borders. The work of the Pacific Civil Registrars Network (PCRN) was featured on the website of GovInsider, a platform for public sector innovation.

Pacific islanders are often highly mobile, meaning that they are born in one country and often migrate for jobs, healthcare and education, and die in another country, says Jeff Montgomery, New Zealand’s Registrar-General and GM of Births, Deaths, Marriages, Citizenship and Translations. As a result these events are registered as separate events in different countries and not linked up. According to Montgomery this creates inaccurate datasets for government planning.

Therefore the 19 island countries in the Pacific are working together to build a single civil registration network, so that data on these vital events are accurately captured and shared across their borders. When complete, the Pacific civil registration network could neaten up loose ends left behind when an islander passes on. “If you die in one country but were born in another, your death will be notified to the birth country and therefore your birth certificate can be closed, your passport can be canceled, and your health information can be used for planning purposes,” Montgomery explains.

The network is still in its early stages. Montgomery hopes to use cloud-based software for sharing data between governments in the future. This could be advantageous for smaller countries that may not have the resources to support their own online system.

New Zealand has already established four data sharing agreements, either in place or in the final stages of drafting – with New South Wales in Australia, and the Cook Islands, Tokelau and Niue in the Pacific.

More News

17 May 2023

(Newsletter May 2023) UNDP published a comprehensive guide to global standards on data protection…

17 May 2023

(Newsletter May 2023) The World Health Organization (WHO), in collaboration with the Brisbane…

17 May 2023

(Newsletter May 2023) The Samoa Bureau of Statistics (SBS) and the United Nations Development…

17 May 2023

(Newsletter May 2023) A new procedure for registering births is being introduced in Uzbekistan…

17 May 2023

(Newsletter May 2023) On April 27, Vital Strategies organized a virtual roundtable titled “Towards…

17 May 2023

(Newsletter May 2023) The WHO Western Pacific Regional Office, in cooperation with the Department…

17 May 2023

(Newsletter May 2023) The World Bank recently approved a US$250 million loan to strengthen…

17 May 2023

(Newsletter May 2023) What is your current title and role? I am currently the Registrar-General…

28 June 2023

(Newsletter June 2023) The kickoff meeting of the Measuring Adult Mortality Community of Practice…

05 April 2023

(Newsletter April 2023) The first Asia-Pacific CRVS Research Forum was held from 3-4 April 2023.…