|
|
|
 |
Search published articles |
 |
|
Showing 2 results for kalhori nadrabadi
Mrs Parya Torabi Kahlan, Mrs Lida Kalhori Nadrabadi, Volume 28, Issue 1 (9-2023)
Abstract
The use of administrative resources in censuses provides the possibility of reducing costs, improving data quality and producing information with a shorter time sequence. The mentioned cases, in addition to the annual monitoring of indicators of sustainable development goals, can also play a significant role in meeting the growing needs of the country's planning and research system, but there are many challenges in this regard, one of the most important of which is the assessment of the quality of administrative data. Quality assessment is the most important aspect of using registration and administrative data in the census, and it is one of the necessities of the registers-based population and housing censuses, where traditional quality assessment criteria cannot be used. In other words, despite the advantages of using register and administrative data in the census, there are many key quality risks that need to be addressed and assessed before using them in the census. In this paper, the methods by which the national statistics offices can evaluate the quality of the data obtained from the registers with the aim of producing high-quality statistical outputs have been reviewed. Therefore, the tools and key indicators used to quantify the quality assessment in each of the four stages of quality assessment including source, input data, process and output in the census process are introduced.
Mrs Parya Torabi Kahlan, Mrs Lida Kalhori Nadrabadi, Volume 28, Issue 2 (3-2024)
Abstract
Over the last decades there have been, increasing challenges to the traditional census. Collecting information from every person in a country using traditional methods is a massive and costly exercise and thus a key concern. Further, reduced willingness amongst the population to respond to the census questionnaires and unexpected crises such as the Covid-19 pandemic have maked it increasingly difficult for NSOs to produce reliable figures with the necessary geographical and substantive detail.But developments of new technologies and approaches to data collection mean that there are also emerging opportunities. The increasing desire to use administrative resources in the implementation of censuses has made it possible to reduce costs, improve data quality, and produce frequent information on an annual basis. A study of the different approaches adopted by some countries in the Asia-Pacific region shows that administrative data are currently being used in different ways to support census operations. Examining these approaches will be very useful to help and guide for countries contemplating the use of or expansion of their use of administrative data for censuses. In this article, while reviewing the definition of register and the types of administrative registers used in register-based census, the proceedings taken in some countries in moving towards register-based census are presented.
|
|
|
|
|
|