The Pacific Civil Registrars Network (PCRN) has been working to facilitate cross-border sharing of civil registration records where birth has occurred in one country and the death occurs in another country. This is a common situation in many Pacific countries and causes national security problems with personal identities remaining open following death and incomplete mortality data. In April, death record sharing will be trialed between New Zealand and Niue, Cook Islands and New South Wales (Australia). PCRN has a paper outlining the issues of cross-border record sharing, which is available from jeff.montgomery@dia.govt.nz.
More News
Newsletter May 2024 The 3rd version of the tool “Analyzing Mortality and Causes of Death” (ANACoD3…
Newsletter May 2024 The tenth meeting of the Regional Steering Group (RSG) for Civil Registration…
ESCAP, together with Vital Strategies, World Bank, and United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)…
Newsletter April 2024 In 2024, over 70 countries are set to hold elections across the world,…
Newsletter April 2024 In 2022, Lao PDR embarked on conducting a CRVS inequality assessment,…
The first cohort of the CRVS applied research training (CART) initiative has launched with 38…
Newsletter May 2024 As part of ongoing efforts to enhance the CRVS system in the Philippines, the…
Newsletter April 2024 The New South Wales government has started the pilot programme for digital…
ESCAP and United Nations Legal Identity Agenda (UNLIA) are hosting the Asia-Pacific Stats Café…
Nepal's Department of National ID and Civil Registration has started assigning national ID numbers…