06 Sep 2017
Solomon Islands National Stakeholder Meeting on Legislative Review
TAGS

The Solomon Islands Civil Registry Office (within the Ministry of Home Affairs) and the national CRVS committee hosted a national stakeholder meeting in June. The meeting was part of the Solomon Islands’ ongoing review of CRVS legislation and brought together key national and partner agencies. It was supported by UNICEF with funding through DFAT; and facilitated by the Pacific Community (SPC), with technical support from Brisbane Accord Group Partners (SPC, UNICEF, WHO and the Australian Bureau of Statistics); and the D4H project (including the University of Melbourne and Vital Strategies). While the Solomon Islands has made a broad range of improvements in the coverage and completeness of their CRVS system and data over the past few years, and the national committee has been extremely active in the implementation of their national CRVS improvement plan, there are still significant challenges remaining to ensure registration is available for all vital events in the country and that no one is “left behind”. The government has recognised that continuing these improvements requires a major revision of the current legislative framework, which has not been updated for nearly 30 years, to ensure that the Solomon Islands is able to make full use of opportunities such as new technology and increasing community outreach through national stakeholders and partners.

The meeting focussed on addressing key structural and design issues in relation to the national CR system as a first step towards updating the legal framework. The committee and stakeholders agreed on updating reporting pathways, timeframes and delegations that will significantly improve the ability of the system to capture and centrally collate records of vital events. These proposed changes will now be the basis for further consultation by the national committee and will form the basis of a white paper to government in order to issue a formal drafting notice.
 

More News

02 August 2023

(Newsletter July 2023) The first consultative meeting of Evidence to Action (E2A) was held by the…

28 June 2023

(Newsletter June 2023) UNICEF, WHO and Vital Strategies have launched a new e-learning course on…

28 June 2023

(Newsletter June 2023) The consultative meeting was held online on 21 June 2023. It presented an…

28 June 2023

(Newsletter June 2023) The Pacific Island Health Officers Association (PIHOA) organized a U.S.-…

28 June 2023

(Newsletter June 2023) The Regional Training Workshop on Transition to Register-based Approaches…

28 June 2023

(Newsletter June 2023) The third Civil Registration Professionals of South Asia (CR8) meeting was…

28 June 2023

(Newsletter June 2023) The national workshop for Turkmenistan CRVS System Business Process…

28 June 2023

(Newsletter June 2023) The Nauru Business Process Improvement analysis and redesign workshop took…

28 June 2023

(Newsletter June 2023) The Council of Ministers of Cambodia approved a draft law on civil registry…

17 May 2023

(Newsletter May 2023) The Human Rights Council adopted at its 52nd session a Resolution on birth…