13 episodes

ID16.9 podcast examines progress towards the realization of United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 16.9 of providing legal identity for all people, including birth registration, by 2030.

ID16.9 Podcast id169podcast

    • Technology

ID16.9 podcast examines progress towards the realization of United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 16.9 of providing legal identity for all people, including birth registration, by 2030.

    IDINA: community-generated identity

    IDINA: community-generated identity

    What happens to identity in the most remote or most neglected communities? It generally gets overlooked. A group of academics at INESCTEC and the University of Minho, Portugal, have devised a system for communities to create and issue their own IDs.
    IDINA, the non-authoritative digital ID system, is gradually built as trusted persons in the community attest to attributes about other individuals. Teachers can add when a person attended school, health workers can add vaccination dates.
    António Sousa, one of the project leaders, explains how levels of confidence can be added to each part of a person’s identity such as name.
    As the project develops, it is hoped an IDINA would be able to act as a digital foundation for acquiring a state – or authoritative – identity.
    Find out more about the ID16.9 Podcast and the importance of legal identity at https://id169.com
    Produced and hosted by Frank Hersey at Biometric Update https://www.biometricupdate.com

    • 30 min
    Africa can do it (ep. 11)

    Africa can do it (ep. 11)

    Cornelius Williams, outgoing global director for child protection at UNICEF, shares insights into identity and birth registration from his 30-year career in the sector.
    20 African countries are on track for Sustainable Development Goal 16.9 says Williams – to provide legal identity for all by 2030, including birth registration.
    But much still needs to be done. African nations have found robust approaches to provider further coverage and now need to work together to share these breakthroughs across the continent.
    African governments are learning the significance of civil registration as a foundation for a modern state, and civil registry departments are better staffed and placed. How can they be better connected with ID departments?
    The cost savings and efficiencies have never been more obvious. But can any country have a fully digital system? Are countries able to resist vendor lock in?
    Are governments being overpromised systems by private vendors?
    Find out more about the ID16.9 Podcast and the importance of legal identity at https://id169.com
    Produced and hosted by Frank Hersey at Biometric Update https://www.biometricupdate.com

    • 42 min
    Cameroon: when a state demands ID it doesn’t issue (ep. 10)

    Cameroon: when a state demands ID it doesn’t issue (ep. 10)

    We take an in-depth look at life without ID in an extreme setting: Cameroon. Extreme because its biometric national identity card (CNI) is required for everything in life, from bank accounts, to internal travel to being able to acquire any other credentials such as driving licenses. Extreme because it is undergoing a humanitarian crisis in its English-speaking region.
    Millions of people are living without this all-powerful ID. A recent contract has vastly accelerated passport production, but many are waiting years for their ID cards.
    We hear from reporter Ayang Macdonald in Yaoundé who has been speaking to people affected by a lack of ID in multiple ways. He explains the struggle to get the ID and life without it, or trying to get by for years with the paper receipt given on application.
    Where there is demand, services appear. Officials suggest payments to speed along an application. Well connected individuals set themselves up as agents.
    Paul Biya has been president since 1982 meaning the majority of the population has known nothing else, but millions are without the ID to vote for change.
    Carrying the ID is a legal requirement, giving authorities an easy option for detaining an individual, especially if he or she is protesting against not having national ID. Cameroonians are growing tired of the situation and are trying to pressure the government into discussing plans to solve the deadlock.
    Find out more about the ID16.9 Podcast and the importance of legal identity at https://id169.com
    Produced and hosted by Frank Hersey at Biometric Update https://www.biometricupdate.com

    • 40 min
    Zimbabwe undocumented (ep. 9)

    Zimbabwe undocumented (ep. 9)

    Zimbabwe is beginning to realize the national impact of low birth registration rates with only 49 percent of under-fives registered nationally in 2019. Without a birth certificate and subsequent ID credentials, a lifetime of missed opportunities can line up in front of a child and this scales up to big problems for the country.
    https://mics-surveys-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/MICS6/Eastern%20and%20Southern%20Africa/Zimbabwe/2019/Snapshots/Zimbabwe%202019%20MICS%20Snapshots%20of%20Key%20Findings_English.pdf (page 40)
    Tafadzwa Mavudzi, a monitoring and evaluation specialist for the NGO Nutrition Action Zimbabwe, talks to the ID16.9 Podcast about her experiences around legal identity, professionally and personally.
    https://naz.co.zw
    Mavudzi discusses how service access can be restricted directly, such as school attendance especially in urban areas, and indirectly such as healthcare when a lack of education means people do not earn enough to travel to or pay for health services.
    There are differing advantages and disadvantages in seeking registration for children in rural and urban areas, with the urban push and facilities gaining the upper hand.
    Children are affected in many ways by not having their births registered, such as being prevented from attending school, being barred from competitive sport and even struggling to prove they are minors if the victim of sexual violence.
    Mavudzi proposes solutions in terms of legal reform and referral pathways for helping those identified as unidentified by NGOs or civil society organizations.
    Find out more about the ID16.9 Podcast and the importance of legal identity at https://id169.com
    Produced and hosted by Frank Hersey at Biometric Update https://www.biometricupdate.com
     

    • 40 min
    ID for all purposes or people? - Privacy International (ep. 8)

    ID for all purposes or people? - Privacy International (ep. 8)

    What’s happened to the UN’s Sustainable Development Goal 16.9 for legal identity for all by 2030? Has it been repurposed to support other goals?  And if so, who’s responsible?
    In this episode we’re in conversation with Tom Fisher, senior researcher at Privacy International, a human rights and surveillance advocacy organization based in London.
    https://privacyinternational.org
    The looseness of the goal and how it is measured has created something of a vacuum which has allowed governments, international organizations and the private sector to interpret the SDG in their own ways. Reports of negative impacts on people around the world have accompanied positive developments and progress towards the goal.
    Fisher discusses the response of civil society.
    Privacy International was one of more than 70 organizations and individuals to sign a joint letter calling on organizations such as the World Bank as wells as donor countries to “cease activities that promote harmful models of digital identification systems.”
    https://www.accessnow.org/open-letter-to-the-world-bank-digital-id-systems/
    We plan to hear from the other side of the debate in an upcoming episode.
    Find out more about the ID 16.9 Podcast and the importance of legal identity at https://id169.com
    Produced and hosted by Frank Hersey at Biometric Update https://www.biometricupdate.com
     

    • 54 min
    Mass catch ups and SMS – Digitech Development (ep. 7)

    Mass catch ups and SMS – Digitech Development (ep. 7)

    Technology and teamwork can help reach the UN’s Sustainable Development Goal 16.9 of legal identity for all, including birth registration, by 2030.
    Digitech Development, a division of French firm Digitech, has developed a way to securely send birth notification details by SMS to the civil registry, allowing birth registration even when 2G connectivity is unavailable.
    The company began by scanning documents in French town halls in the 1990s.
    Digitech Development’s Margaux Audet explains how the technology is working in Côte d'Ivoire and how the firm was part of a consortium that carried out a mass ‘catch up’ exercise in the Democratic Republic of Congo which registered the births of 2.4 million primary school children who had not been registered following their births.
    https://digitech-development.com
    Find out more about the ID 16.9 Podcast and the importance of legal identity at https://id169.com
    Produced and hosted by Frank Hersey at Biometric Update https://www.biometricupdate.com

    • 28 min

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