Kadin launches data-driven investment guide for Central Papua
The Central Papua Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Kadin) launched the Central Papua Regional Economic Potential Book, ...

"DATA-DRIVEN" · 총 7건
필터 보기현재 지수
49.5
0 = 부정 우세
50 = 중립
100 = 긍정 우세
최근 7일 기준 85,591건을 분석한 결과, 뉴스 심리지수는 49.5(균형)입니다. 긍정 10,539건(12.3%)·중립 61,790건(72.2%)·부정 13,262건(15.5%)이며, 중립 비중이 뚜렷하게 높습니다. 성향 지수는 종합 20.8(보수 경향)입니다.
The Central Papua Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Kadin) launched the Central Papua Regional Economic Potential Book, ...

[Capital FM] Nairobi -- Interior Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen has said technology- and data-driven policing will form the backbone of the planned Nairobi Metropolitan Police Unit (NMPU), as Kenya accelerates efforts to modernise urban security and law enforcement systems.
Interior CS Kipchumba Murkomen says technology and data-driven policing will anchor the Nairobi Metropolitan Police Unit after benchmarking lessons from the NYPD in New York.
SEJONG — The Korea Fair Trade Commission will execute one of its biggest organizational expansions in years, signaling a tougher and more data-driven antitrust push under the Lee Jae Myung administration, KTFC Chair Ju Biung-ghi announced Tuesday. The KFTC plans to add 237 officials and establish new investigation and economic analysis units to better handle increasingly complex cases involving online platforms, consumer cartels and large conglomerates. The overhaul comes as the regulator faces
Country: World Source: United Nations Population Fund Brazzaville/New York 26 May 2026 – UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund, today signed a new Memorandum of Understanding with the African Development Bank (AfDB) to position maternal health and demographic resilience as central pillars of Africa's economic transformation. The agreement, signed on the margins of the African Development Bank annual meeting, frames investment in maternal health not only as a health issue but also as an investment in economic growth, productivity, resilience and human capital development, to enable countries across the continent to harness their demographic dividend. Africa has made huge progress in reducing maternal mortality, but ongoing challenges remain, linked to structural obstacles, unequal access to quality health services, and financing gaps. "Immense opportunity is within Africa's grasp if we make strategic investments in women and young people. Economic progress for Africa is only possible if we prioritize women's health and address one of the continent's most pressing development challenges: preventable maternal deaths," said Diene Keita, Executive Director of UNFPA. "This renewed partnership reflects our shared commitment to put maternal health and human capital development at the heart of Africa's economic transformation agenda." As part of the partnership, UNFPA and the African Development Bank will explore innovative financing and implementation mechanisms to help countries unlock investment in women and young people as drivers of Africa’s growth. Priorities include investments to modernize the health workforce through digital training; strengthening local procurement systems; upgrading climate-resilient health infrastructure; and supporting the digitization of health information systems, among others. Since 1992, UNFPA and the AfDB have worked together to advance health systems and data-driven development across Africa. Just a few of the many achievements from this collaboration include: Modernization of population data in the Government of Côte d’Ivoire’s most recent census, enabling projections on fertility, mortality, migration and other key areas. Improved access to Emergency Obstetric and Newborn Care services across 11 health districts of Cameroon, bringing antenatal care coverage to 90% in targeted areas and bringing the modern contraceptive prevalence rate to far above the national average. Awareness raising and behaviour change activities linking water, sanitation and hygiene with reproductive health and gender across eight rural regions of Madagascar. Integrating gender equality, sexual and reproductive health and protection considerations into climate adaptation planning across 10 countries of East and Southern Africa. UNFPA will work with the AfDB to ensure that demographic transition roadmaps sit at the heart of national financing strategies, ensuring that investments in health and rights are recognized as smart investments for Africa's future. Media contacts Siaka Traore Traore@unfpa.org; media@unfpa.org WhatsApp number: +226 74132323 Mathias Teumeni Noune teumeninoune@unfpa.org Whatsapp number: +242 052050616 About UNFPA UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund, is the sexual and reproductive health agency of the UN, working to uphold the rights and choices of women, girls and young people across more than 150 countries and territories. It reaches millions of women, girls and young people with essential health services, protection from violence, and with vital information about their bodies and rights. It also helps governments plan for changing population needs so people can thrive today and in the future, regardless of fertility trends.
China is increasingly using advanced monitoring systems and data-driven conservation tools to support biodiversity recovery, officials and researchers said Saturday at a forum in Shanghai's Chongming district, highlighting ecological restoration efforts along the Yangtze River.
CLIMATE debates routinely cite Pakistan’s grim paradox: we are among the world’s countries most exposed to climate shocks, yet we have contributed little to the emissions that drive them. At recent COPs and other international forums, Pakistan has rightly called out this injustice, as well as the failure of international recognition to translate into financing at the required scale. But it would be equally inexcusable if we failed to recognise the same pattern of injustice within the country. The regions most battered by floods, heat extremes and glacial lake outburst floods are often the least responsible for high-emissions lifestyles: excessive energy use, private vehicle dependence and other climate-unfriendly consumption patterns. While a common defence claims lack of granular data for addressing our problems, including climate adaptation, overlooking the existing data from multiple sources within Pakistan indicates sheer apathy. Climate risk can be mapped at the district level using the Met Office’s indicators on temperature and rainfall, census markers of drought- and flood-affected mauzas and other available information. Last year, the Population Council released its District Vulnerability Index for Pakistan, curating and analysing Pakistani data to rank districts and link them with specific climate risks. Of the 20 most vulnerable districts, 17 are situated in Balochistan, two in KP and one in Sindh. These districts are likely to face significant climate stress, including temperature and rainfall changes, flooding and droughts. We must first acknowledge these inherent disparities and then design remedies to reduce chronic vulnerabilities. To build climate resilience, reducing vulnerability must form the core of our development agenda. The picture that emerges is consistent: the most vulnerable districts are concentrated in Balochistan and KP, extending into Sindh and southern Punjab if we expand the vulnerability threshold. This encompasses roughly 29 million people living with deep, structural disadvantage. Many of these communities are remote and disconnected; long distances to paved roads cut them off from even primary schools and basic healthcare. Households are more likely to live in temporary, often overcrowded single-room homes with large families. Livelihoods depend heavily on agriculture and livestock, frequently as unpaid family labour. These districts will repeatedly bear the brunt of multiple climate shocks. If we refuse to acknowledge that millions of Pakistanis live on the edge — highly exposed and poorly protected — then every flood and extra degree of heat will push them further into poverty illness, and displacement. This will only exacerbate the damage of international climate injustice, as communities with unequal starting points cannot absorb shocks, rebuild and return to their earlier lives. This was fully apparent when the 2022 floods produced scenes that should have shamed us all: pregnant women giving birth in the open, children dying from preventable causes, families with nowhere to bury their dead. The catastrophe was not merely about water levels; it was about who the water reached first — and who was left with the least protection when it receded. Climate action cannot be separated from development planning. Unless we level the playing field through smarter planning and fairer resource allocation, climate initiatives will remain a band-aid until the next shock knocks families down again, especially women and children, and traps them in perpetual poverty. Pakistan is at its best when it solves its problems with local capacity and local solutions, but those solutions must reach the places that are most exposed and the least served. We learned during the Covid-19 crisis that shocks are not experienced equally. Where systems are stronger — typically urban centres — the people cope better. Where services are thin and distances long — generally remote rural districts — the same disruption becomes a crisis. Climate shocks follow these same fault lines, but they will intensify and recur. At the recent Breathe Pakistan conference, more than a dozen panels warned that time was running out. Speakers highlighted technical solutions — renewables, e-vehicles, cleaner industry — and urged changes in personal spending and behaviour to reduce waste and pollution. All these matter, but climate action can succeed only when the people are equipped with a minimum platform of education, health and livelihoods. Policies that assume capacity where none exists will not protect those living on the edges. Inclusivity must be central. The needs of women and girls, young people, infants, older persons and people with disabilities were discussed in a panel titled ‘Unequal burdens, shared futures: reframing climate action through equity’. True climate justice, achieved through equity, must begin by confronting the reality that many of the most severely vulnerable districts also face multiple, overlapping climate risks. In these places, children may walk 10 times the usual distance to reach school and a pregnant woman may need to travel 50 kilometres for an antenatal check-up — distances that turn every flood, heatwave and disease outbreak into a life-threatening event. No single government or group is solely to blame, nor should any feel defensive; high levels of vulnerability transcend provincial boundaries and did not emerge overnight. Regional and district-level disparities are the product of political economy, geography and decades of uneven investment in infrastructure, human capital and livelihood opportunities. Corrective action must transcend political interests and be treated as a national priority. If we are serious about climate resilience, then reducing basic vulnerability must be at the core of our development agenda — not as an add-on after disasters. The most practical path involves data-driven, district-focused planning that targets equity and risk together. Provincial finance commissions and local government strategies should align behind a coordinated reform agenda for the most vulnerable districts by 2030. This agenda should include connecting remote communities through better roads, transport and communications; upgrading education and health services; diversifying livelihoods; expanding disaster-resilient housing; investing in human capital through improved demographics (including lower fertility rates and higher labour force participation); and strengthening community-level preparedness and response. This is what climate justice looks like when it starts at home. The writer is country adviser, Population Council. Published in Dawn, May 23rd, 2026