This is great, thanks for
This is great, thanks for sharing. Where can I access the full report?


SIPA research team on the road from Gulu to Awach, Uganda, to conduct research at rural health clinics.
Photo courtesy of Mark Weingarten
What is innovative and compelling to one party may seem unsound and suspect to another. Fulfilling the UN Global Pulse vision will require a truly multilateral, cross-sectoral effort, yet what exactly does this constellation of collaborators look like? And, more importantly, how might these potential comrades view the unprecedented approaches Global Pulse is proposing?
While Global Pulse’s 2010-11 Road Map focuses largely on the initiative’s technical to-do’s, much of the effort in realizing Global Pulse will lie in securing buy-in from country governments, local communities, and diverse partners large and small. Though technology is at the heart of the initiative, skillful, devolved navigation of cultural sensitivities, political barriers, and operational challenges will be critical to its success. Without partners that fully understand and are committed to the sub-global modules of Global Pulse, the larger ecosystem is destined to fail. Technology, no matter how cutting-edge and sophisticated, is but a fraction of the battle.
To this end, UNICEF’s Innovation Unit and Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA) undertook a semester-long (December 2009 to May 2010) research project, “New Methods for Data Collection, Analysis, and Use”, to explore the non-technological challenges Global Pulse will face as it works to bring its vision to global scale.
Although Global Pulse will be responsive to widely varied regional parameters, indicators, and priorities, in order to focus the research, SIPA was asked to analyze two current UNICEF projects, one in Uganda and the other in Iraq. Though both involved real-time data collection, they were entirely distinct in aim, focus, set-up, and stage of development.
UNICEF Uganda is developing a mobile-based health vulnerability monitoring programme that builds upon and provides real-time support to existing surveillance systems. UNICEF Iraq is exploring how to better understand, and thus serve, the needs of the country’s most vulnerable children by providing them a direct (mobile) connection to reach out to those that can help them. Beyond differences in project nature and scope, Uganda and Iraq, as countries, vary widely in character, technical infrastructure, level of poverty, dependency on foreign aid, and political sensitivities. And while a sample of two is hardly adequate in developing a policy framework, it is a starting point. The unique challenges presented by the Uganda and Iraq pilots – and by their respective operating environments – demonstrate the flexibility necessary in building a global system, and the necessity of a policy roadmap that anticipates and accommodates diversity.
The researchers traveled to the field to meet with UNICEF country office staff, government representatives and other implementation partners, end users, local NGOs, and subject matter experts to better understand the complex contexts in which the programmes would be deployed. Through intimate understanding and analysis of the projects’ processes – from rationale, to design, to interaction with governments and implementation partners, to execution strategies – the researchers were able to abstract lessons for extending similar systems to future programmes and states.
The researchers’ recommendations for UN Global Pulse are summarized below:
For more information on the UNICEF-SIPA collaboration, including full details of SIPA’s recommendations and processes, please see the full report.
Professor Elisabeth Lindenmayer, director of the UN Studies Program at SIPA, oversaw the seminar. Acting as advisors were Christopher Fabian and Panthea Lee of UNICEF Innovation, and Robert Kirkpatrick and Chris van der Walt of UN Global Pulse.
This is great, thanks for sharing. Where can I access the full report?