News Today Logo

Posted 17 Jan 2025

2 min read

UNICEF’s ‘Global Outlook 2025: Prospects for Children’ deals with the transformative role that DPI can play in delivery of digital public services for children.

What is meant by DPI?

  • It is a set of shared digital systems that deliver and provide equitable access to public and/or private services at societal scale.
  • Its ecosystem comprises technology, markets and governance.

Role of DPI in children's well-being

  • Equitable access to essential services: E.g. Digital IDs connected to civil registration systems enable lifelong access to essential services.
    • Education: E.g. India’s national digital education platform, DIKSHA, bridges educational gaps.
    • Health: Facilitates electronic health records. E.g. Electronic Immunization Registry in Jamaica improved childhood vaccination rate.
  • Foster financial literacy and inclusion by enabling children to participate in the digital economy
  • Enhances social protection systems by enabling targeted delivery of benefits and improved data sharing for better child services.

Challenges associated with use of DPI

  • Poor connectivity and digital inequality: E.g.- Only 43.6% of Indian rural youth aged 15-24 can send emails.
  • Poor integration of Civil Registration and Vital Statistics (CRVS) systems into national ID: It restricts universal coverage.
  • Others: Lack of data interoperability and harmonization across systems, data protection, security and surveillance issues, etc.

Recommendations

  • Digitize CRVS systems to serve as a basis for digital IDs.
  • Enable seamless, safe and secure data exchange between health, education and social services
  • Empower children, youth and their families through digital financial inclusion and literacy,
  • Children's input must be included when designing digital infrastructure that affects them.
  • Tags :
  • Digital Public Infrastructure
  • DPI and Children
Watch News Today
Width resize handle
Height resize handle

Search Notes

Filter Notes

No notes yet

Create your first note to get started.

No notes found

Try adjusting your search criteria.

Subscribe for Premium Features