Skip to content
  • About
  • Books & Publications
    • Books
    • Journal Articles
    • Chapters
    • Research and Policy reports
    • AE4RIA & 360info Science-Policy Briefs 
    • Working Papers
  • Projects
    • Climate Neutrality & Resilience
    • Sustainable Oceans & Seas
    • Sustainable WFEB Nexus
    • Innovation Acceleration
    • Socio-Economics & Financial Pathways Behavioral Economics
    • Education & Skills
    • Global, European, Euro-Asian Initiatives
      • The Lancet Commission
      • SDSN European Green Deal Senior Working Group
      • Global Roundtable for Sustainable Shipping and Ports
      • UN SDSN Sustainable Euro-Asian Seas Initiative
  • Speeches and Presentations
  • Multimedia
    • Gallery
    • Videos
    • Project Videos
    • Public Press
    • Newsletters
    • Activity Reports
  • Courses
  • Scientific Conferences
  • News
  • Contact
Menu
  • About
  • Books & Publications
    • Books
    • Journal Articles
    • Chapters
    • Research and Policy reports
    • AE4RIA & 360info Science-Policy Briefs 
    • Working Papers
  • Projects
    • Climate Neutrality & Resilience
    • Sustainable Oceans & Seas
    • Sustainable WFEB Nexus
    • Innovation Acceleration
    • Socio-Economics & Financial Pathways Behavioral Economics
    • Education & Skills
    • Global, European, Euro-Asian Initiatives
      • The Lancet Commission
      • SDSN European Green Deal Senior Working Group
      • Global Roundtable for Sustainable Shipping and Ports
      • UN SDSN Sustainable Euro-Asian Seas Initiative
  • Speeches and Presentations
  • Multimedia
    • Gallery
    • Videos
    • Project Videos
    • Public Press
    • Newsletters
    • Activity Reports
  • Courses
  • Scientific Conferences
  • News
  • Contact

Follow

Facebook Twitter Instagram Dstream-google2
Search
Close

Home > Expanding the Data Ecosystem: The role of Non-Official data for SDG Monitoring and Review

Expanding the Data Ecosystem: The role of Non-Official data for SDG Monitoring and Review

UN Statistical Commission Side-Event: Organized by the Philippines Statistics Authority(PSA), UNDP, the Transparency, Accountability & Participation (TAP) Network, the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN) and DataShift

To meet the ambition of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), national implementation efforts must be matched by an equally comprehensive and inclusive monitoring and accountability framework. While National Statistical Offices (NSOs) are the primary bodies responsible for monitoring SDG progress, data being produced by other actors will also play a crucial role in providing a robust and accurate picture of progress at all levels. These “non-official” data sources can be instrumental in helping complement data from official statistical sources, and are critical to implement the 2030 Agenda’s commitment to “leave no one behind.”

Better data from a wider range of reliable sources has the potential to maximize development gains by providing an accurate snapshot of progress towards the SDGs and to help make better policy decisions. This data can come from a range of sources, including the UN, other multilateral institutions, civil society organizations, research institutions, academia, the private sector, and citizens themselves. It ranges from global surveys (e.g. Transparency International’s Global Corruption Barometer) and indices (e.g. UNDP’s Multidimensional Poverty Index) to personal, qualitative data generated by some of the world’s most marginalized people at the local level (e.g. citizen-generated data project Map Kibera). It also includes data translated from publicly available (open) data sets to track a specific phenomenon/issue (e.g. Publish What You Fund’s Aid Transparency Index) and information collated through expert assessments (e.g. CIVICUS’ annual State of Civil Society Report). All of these data sources will play a critical role in measuring progress against the SDGs and the 2030 Agenda.

This side event will provide an opportunity for experts to examine of the role of non-official data in complementing official sources of data for the 2030 Agenda, highlight ways in which these data providers are already contributing to SDG monitoring and review efforts, and demonstrate how NSOs have worked with these non-official actors around data collection and usage.

Speakers

  • Lisa Bersales, Head of Philippines Statistics Authority (PSA)
  • Anna Lührmann, Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, Varieties of Democracy Institute (V-Dem)
  • Representative from Departamento Administrativo Nacional de Estadística (DANE)(TBC)
  • Representative from UNDP Pilot Country (Georgia, Uruguay, El Salvador)
  • Tom Orrell, Senior Advocacy Advisor, Publish What You Fund (TBC)
Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin

The Alliance of Excellence for Research and Innovation on Aeiphoria (AE4RIA) is an unofficial umbrella for the collaboration of the following institutions:

  • Research and Innovation Centres:
  • ReSEES LABORATORY -AUEB
  • S.D.U-ATHENA
  • DTU Management Department of Technology, Management and Economics Climate and Energy Policy Division
  • Stochastic Modeling and Applications Laboratory - AUEB
  • Innovation Acceleration Hubs:
  • SDSN Global Climate Hub
  • MENA Maritime Accelerator
  • Black Sea Accelerator
  • BRIGAID Connect Association
  • EIT Climate- KIC
  • Science - Policy Networks
  • Sustainable Development Solutions Network
  • SDSN Global Climate Hub
  • Sustainable Development Solutions Network Europe
  • Sustainable Development Solutions Network Greece
  • NEXUS Cluster
  • WATER EUROPE
  • Scientific Associations and Academies
  • European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists (EAERE)
  • World Council of Environmental and Resource Economists Associations (WCEREA)
  • Academia Europaea
  • World Academy of Art and Science (WAAS)
  • InterAcademy Partnership (IAP)
  • European Academy of Sciences and Arts

Newsletter

© 2026 Phoebe Koundouri All Rights Reserved – Powered by Biznet Infoservices Ltd. Design & Development by Dstream