26 Dec 2024
New global data on birth registration
TAGS

The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) just released a report showcasing the latest global update on birth registration. 
The report, titled "The Right Start in Life: Global Levels and Trends in Birth Registration," reveals that while global birth registration rates have increased from 75% in 2019 to 77% today, millions of children still remain unregistered and invisible to government systems. Over 150 million children under five remain unregistered, leaving them vulnerable and excluded from essential services. Approximately 50 million of these live in Asia and the Pacific.

The report emphasized the need for continued investment in civil registration systems and targeted interventions to reach marginalized communities, ensuring that every child, regardless of their background or location, has a legal identity.

Please click here for the report.

More News

23 February 2022

The Pacific Community (SPC), together with UNICEF have published a series of CRVS profiles for the…

23 February 2022

The World Health Organization's (WHO) Eleventh Revision of the International Classification of…

23 February 2022

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight February (2) 2022) Regularly, our community newsletter puts a spotlight…

23 February 2022

Organised with the support of the Technical Support Unit for Civil Registration and Vital…

09 February 2022

Marshall Islands, Kiribati, Palau, Vanuatu and Samoa are working to produce vital…

09 February 2022

In Australia, the New South Whales (NSW) Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages celebrated the…

01 February 2022

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight February 2022) At the Second Ministerial Conference on CRVS in Asia and…

01 February 2022

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight February 2022) The United Nations at its seventy sixth session of the…

01 February 2022

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight February 2022) In Australia, the New South Whales (NSW) Registry of…

01 February 2022

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight February 2022) Marshall Islands, Kiribati, Palau, Vanuatu and Samoa are…