European Commission MPHASIS Mutual Progress on Homelessness through Advancing and Strengthening Information Systems THE RESEARCH PROGRAMME Matt Harrison.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Child Rights Toolkit Comprehensive Toolkit To Address Children's Rights In Development & Humanitarian Cooperation And Government Programming.
Advertisements

Kosovo Cadastral Agency Land Administration in Kosovo Bengt ANDERSSON, Sweden Presentation at the Annual Meeting 2003 FIG Commission 7 Krakow, Poland,
Survey of the civil and public services of EU Member States Jake Byrne Civil Service HR Directorate Department of Public Expenditure and Reform.
Will 2011 be the last Census of its kind in England and Wales? Roma Chappell, Programme Director Beyond 2011 Office for National Statistics, July 2011.
Bill Edgar (Dundee University) Matt Harrison (RIS) Volker Busch-Geertsema (GISS) European Commission MPHASIS Mutual Progress on Homelessness through Advancing.
Barbara M. Altman Emmanuelle Cambois Jean-Marie Robine Extended Questions Sets: Purpose, Characteristics and Topic Areas Fifth Washington group meeting.
Bill Edgar (Dundee University) Matt Harrison (RIS) Volker Busch-Geertsema (GISS) European Commission MPHASIS Mutual Progress on Homelessness through Advancing.
Bill Edgar (University of Dundee UK) Peter Watson (RIS, London) European Commission MPHASIS Mutual Progress on Homelessness through Advancing and Strengthening.
Counting the Dutch, The Future of the Virtual Census in the Netherlands Presentation at the seminar Counting the 7 Billion 24 February 2012 * Geert Bruinooge.
Methodological Preparations for an Irish Post Census National Disability Survey in 2006 Paper for Washington Group on Disability Statistics 5 th Meeting.
Bill Edgar (University of Dundee UK) European Commission MPHASIS Mutual Progress on Homelessness through Advancing and Strengthening Information Systems.
European Commission MPHASIS Mutual Progress on Homelessness through Advancing and Strengthening Information Systems HOMELESSNESS MONITORING INFORMATION.
REPUBLIC OF TURKEY TURKISH STATISTICAL INSTITUTE TurkStat Population and Demography Statistics Department Population and Migration Statistics Team
United Nations Workshop on Revision 3 of Principles and recommendations for Population and Housing Censuses and Census Evaluation Amman, Jordan, 19 – 23.
Ireland “Homelessness Strategy and Data: A Two-way Process” Denis Conlan & Marie Falvey Housing Division Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local.
Data collection on homelessness in statistical offices in France 1. National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies (INSEE) 2. Statistical Office.
Bill Edgar (University of Dundee UK) Volker Busch-Geertsema (GISS, Germany) MPHASIS Mutual Progress on Homelessness through Advancing and Strengthening.
Reviewing the relevance and effectiveness of the WHO Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Second meeting of the Expert Advisory.
United Nations Workshop on Revision 3 of Principles and recommendations for Population and Housing Censuses and Census Evaluation Amman, Jordan, 19 – 23.
MEADOW: Guidelines for a European survey of organisations Nathalie Greenan CEE and TEPP-CNRS Exploring possibilities for the development of European data.
COUNTRY EXPERIENCES IN DEVELOPING HOMELESS DATA COLLECTION POLAND Piotr Olech - Pomeranian Forum in Aid of Getting Out of Homelessness.
THE ROLE OF CIVIL SOCIETY IN WELFARE MIX MODEL CREATION Best Practice Model Social Center "Home of colors"
United Nations Statistics Division
Bill Edgar (Dundee University) Matt Harrison (RIS) Volker Busch-Geertsema (GISS) European Commission MPHASIS Mutual Progress on Homelessness through Advancing.
Copyright 2010, The World Bank Group. All Rights Reserved. Tourism statistics, 1 Business Statistics and Registers 1.
Toolkit for Mainstreaming HIV and AIDS in the Education Sector Guidelines for Development Cooperation Agencies.
Emerging methodologies for the census in the UNECE region Paolo Valente United Nations Economic Commission for Europe Statistical Division International.
Overview of gender statistics: why, what, for whom and how Workshop on Integrating a Gender Perspective into National Statistics, Kampala, Uganda
FEANTSA’S « Ending Homelessness Campaign ». Homelessness - a reality in all EU member states Homelessness is a reality in all EU Member States. Ending.
Bill Edgar (Dundee University) Barbara Illsley (Dundee University) European Commission MPHASIS Mutual Progress on Homelessness through Advancing and Strengthening.
Assessments. Assessment in the Project Cycle DESIGN IMPLEMENTATION MONITORING EVALUATION ASSESSMENT.
1 Women Entrepreneurs in Rural Tourism Evaluation Indicators Bristol, November 2010 RG EVANS ASSOCIATES November 2010.
European Commission Introduction to the Community Programme for Employment and Social Solidarity PROGRESS
Stakeholder consultations Kyiv May 13, Why stakeholder consultations? To help improve project design and implementation To inform people about changes.
Near East Regional Workshop - Linking Population and Housing Censuses with Agricultural Censuses. Amman, Jordan, June 2012 Additional Agricultural.
Volker Busch-Geertsema (GISS) Barbara Illsley (University of Dundee UK) European Commission MPHASIS Mutual Progress on Homelessness through Advancing and.
Introduction to PROGRESS Community programme for Employment and Social Solidarity Finn Ola Jølstad Norwegian Ministry of Labour and Social Inclusion.
The Dutch Virtual Census based on registers and already existing surveys Eric Schulte Nordholt Senior researcher and project leader of the Census Statistics.
Monitoring the Implementation of New Domestic Violence Laws By Mirjana Dokmanovic, Serbia Regional Conference on Domestic Violence Legal Reform Sofia,
Bill Edgar (University of Dundee UK) Barbara Illsley (University of Dundee UK) European Commission MPHASIS Mutual Progress on Homelessness through Advancing.
EFDRR Our Goal… Good HFA Exchanges 1.Describe some exchanges that have taken place and any results. 2.Analyse the results of the questionnaire. 3.Make.
Homelessness in New Zealand Towards a Standard Definition and Classification May 2015.
United Nations Regional Seminar on Census Data Dissemination and Spatial Analysis for Arabic Speaking Countries, Amman, Jordan May 2011 Identification.
New sources – administrative registers Genovefa RUŽIĆ.
DETERMINE Working document # 4 'Economic arguments for addressing social determinants of health inequalities' December 2009 Owen Metcalfe & Teresa Lavin.
Census of Economic Establishments in Ethiopia Yasin Mossa Central Statistics Agency of Ethiopia July 2009.
1 1 Social and demographic statistics – some issues Jan Byfuglien Statistics Norway 9.1.
Redistribution of Resources in the Process of De-institutionalization Halyna Postoliuk Director of “Hope & Homes for Children” in Ukraine Chisinau November.
1 For a Population Statistical Register Characteristics and Potentials for the Official Statistics Central department for administrative data and archives.
A project implemented by the HTSPE consortium This project is funded by the European Union SECURITY AND CITIZENSHIP RIGHT AND CITIZENSHIP
LOGO Mamdouh Abdel Aziz Refaiy Dr. Associate Professor, Business Administration Department, Faculty of Commerce, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt. Evaluating.
Creating Open Data whilst maintaining confidentiality Philip Lowthian, Caroline Tudor Office for National Statistics 1.
Kathy Corbiere Service Delivery and Performance Commission
United Nations Regional Seminar on Census Data Dissemination and Spatial Analysis for Arabic Speaking Countries, Amman, Jordan May 2011 Identification.
© Statistisches Bundesamt, VI A Statistisches Bundesamt The new method of the next german Population census Johann Szenzenstein, Federal Statistical Office,
QUALITY ASSESSMENT OF THE REGISTER-BASED SLOVENIAN CENSUS 2011 Rudi Seljak, Apolonija Flander Oblak Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia.
Overview and challenges in the use of administrative data in official statistics IAOS Conference Shanghai, October 2008 Heli Jeskanen-Sundström Statistics.
The use of population register data for defining the homeless in Finland Jari Nieminen Statistics Finland.
Barbara Illsley (University of Dundee UK) Volker Busch-Geertsema (GISS, Germany) European Commission MPHASIS Mutual Progress on Homelessness through Advancing.
REPUBLIC OF TURKEY TURKISH STATISTICAL INSTITUTE TurkStat Demography Statistics Department Population and Migration Statistics Group EXPERIENCES.
Regional Workshop on the 2010 World Programme on Population and Housing Censuses: International standards, contemporary technologies for census mapping.
DATA SOURCES FOR MEASURING FORCED DISPLACEMENT WITH A FOCUS ON ADMINISTRATIVE SOURCES Khassoum DIALLO Snr Statistician UNHCR Regional workshop on strengthening.
Introducing Statistics Finland Study visit of State Statistical Service of Ukraine September 2015 / Ari Tyrkkö.
INTER-AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK CAPACITY BUILDING AND TRAINING.
SOCIAL DIALOGUE IN THE SOCIAL SERVICES SECTOR IN EUROPE
Summary of key findings Inga Pavlovaite
European policy perspectives on social experimentation
Albania 2021 Population and Housing Census - Plans
SOCIAL DIALOGUE WITHIN THE SCOPE OF EUPAN
Presentation transcript:

European Commission MPHASIS Mutual Progress on Homelessness through Advancing and Strengthening Information Systems THE RESEARCH PROGRAMME Matt Harrison Homeless Link Final Project Conference Paris 17 th September 2009

European Commission Action Oriented Research Five areas of research  Transferability of Good Practice  Service Provider Databases  Client Record Systems  Making Use of Administrative Data  Institutional Population Data  Population Register Data  Usability of Core Variables  Survey of all partner countries

European Commission Service Provider Databases  The majority of homeless people use homelessness services  There is a wide range of services provided by the state, municipalities, NGOs, faith groups and the private sector  We developed a typology of services in the Measuring Homelessness project  Our research then found that few countries have comprehensive databases of service providers  We described a methodology for compiling and maintaining a directory or database of service providers  We carried out research to test out our findings in Bulgaria, Italy and the Netherlands

European Commission Service Provider Databases  Studies examining proposed methodology in Bulgaria, Italy and Netherlands  Different levels of service provision, existing systems and national government policy  Identified existing databases, stakeholders involved and next steps to be taken  Support for proposed methodology for developing databases appropriate in different national contexts  Staged approach and use of existing data  Evidence of common data collected about services

European Commission Service Provider Databases  New national database being developed in Italy and proposal for new Shelter Atlas for Netherlands  Link with client data important  Evidence to confirm costs and timescales involved  Barriers and ways of overcoming them identified  Gaining backing from government and key stakeholders and clear purpose crucial

European Commission Client Recording Systems  Recent years have seen the widespread development of computerised client recording systems in homelessness services  No country has a comprehensive common client information system – although some are in development  One aim of the research was to test the applicability of one system (Link) in different national contexts.  Pilot systems were developed for Hungary and Sweden

European Commission Client Recording Systems  An alternative approach is to define methods for extracting data from multiple systems for national collation  This approach is used in France and Germany  We commissioned research to look at the French situation

European Commission Client Recording Systems  Link software (already used in UK and Ireland) was translated into Hungarian and Swedish  Local NGOs in Budapest and Stockholm identified to pilot the software with their clients  Pilot system evaluated

European Commission Client Recording - Issues  Data Protection  Translation  Technical issues  Conflicting needs of operational data collection and statistical data collection  Not all data known about users of low threshold services

European Commission Data Extract Modules: France  Aim  To examine issues involved in extracting data from existing software systems  Three systems examined  Regional Information System-Poitou Charentes, COHPHRA (both local level systems) and Research System 115 (national level)  Method –  documentary analysis of the software used  interviews with the key personnel in each information system.  Findings - Work in progress in France with aim of:  Moving towards a computerised real time system of data collection  Obligatory for all services for the homeless  Development of a standard definition of variables

European Commission France  An information system requires a formal piloting policy:  Financial investment (by the public authorities)  Mobilisation of actors and cooperation  Definition of the needs of data collection –  specification of the variables and data items  standardisation of the nomenclatures used  Definition of the theoretical and geographical perimeter of the services to be covered  Agreement on an application of collection and its development

European Commission Organisational Issues  Joint institutional policy working needed with a range of stakeholders  Co-ordination by the State or regional government  A degree of flexibility needed – various options  Obligatory for those providing services to homeless  Incentive measures needed  Clear management by service provider organisations  System that provides tool for providers and on-line benefits

European Commission Implementation Issues  Involvement of field workers  The degree of computerisation of services  Training of Staff  The confidentiality of data collected  The reproduction of data uploads  The use of data for purposes of management control?  The impact of information systems on the practices of social interventionists

European Commission Use of Administrative Data  Administrative data is data collected by the state and/or municipal authorities in the course of their work  For some groups of homeless people this may be an important source of data – this is of particular relevance for homeless people in institutional settings.  We commissioned research into the prison population in Norway and Poland and how homelessness is defined, identified and measured in people leaving prison in these countries

European Commission Administrative Data – Prison Population  The purpose of the research was to examine the use made of administrative data on people released from prison who have no home to go to.  The research aimed to identify the procedures used and good practice models of using such data.  Undertaken in Poland and Norway which were considered to represent examples of good practice.

European Commission Poland  1,450 prisoners (from 90,000) leaving prison annually registered as requiring support due to homelessness  This underestimates the scale of the real problem  Current procedures are based on individual assessment of housing status by officials  Supporting vulnerable prisoners to acquire housing on release is not a priority  Being a person without a permanent address has implications  Existing procedures screen housing status three times:  Article 38 of the Executive Penal Code sets the ground for cooperation with NGOs

European Commission Poland - Conclusions  The need to promote evidence-based planning and implementation of policies  Transfer the paper registration systems into a fully computerized (NOE.Net) database  A unified procedure for defining homelessness status before release – the same set of questions taken into account across the whole country  Disconnecting data collection on housing from any consequences for receiving awards, passes and permissions during imprisonment

European Commission Norway  The operational definition of a homeless person in Norway is a person without owned or rented accommodation and who is staying in one of five situations  One of these is a person that is under Criminal Services due to be released within two months and is without a dwelling of his or her own  More than 60% of inmates are homeless. Approximately 6,000 persons are released from prison to homelessness each year  Three main administrative registration systems have been used for collecting data on homelessness

European Commission Norway - Issues  Link of release on parole to housing status –  satisfactory housing situation seems to be an almost mandatory rule for release  Impact on reliability of data collection –  inmates often give their address at time of imprisonment or give a false address  Data Quality  on housing status held in KOMPIS system not reliable.  KOSTRA system for use of temporary accommodation after release from prison and discharge from institution.  Data on housing after release from prison is not covered in Bokart

European Commission Norway - Conclusions  National monitoring system on homelessness based on administrative data not yet implemented  Registration of the housing status of convicts and persons on remand in KOMPIS not reliable or complete  Questions on homelessness on release from prison, taken out of the KOSTRA system  Due to lack of resources to quality control the figures  The most reliable statistics on homelessness among prisoners remains the national survey of homeless persons  The Criminal Services Department has been a respondent in all four national surveys of homelessness

European Commission Population Registers  The 2011 Census aims to count the whole population, including homeless people  Some countries have introduced population-registers to augment or replace the Census.  We commissioned research in two countries (Slovenia and Germany) to test how homeless people are or could be identified and measured in their population registers.

European Commission 2011 Census – Register Based Systems  12 Countries to use registers or combination of register and survey  Germany and Slovenia chosen as case studies  recent decisions to use registers  Census data mainly drawn from  Central Population Register (CPR)  Database of Households  Register of Dwellings / Buildings  Questions  Are homeless counted in the register based system?  Are some categories of homeless difficult to count?

European Commission Limits of Register Based System  Germany  No CPR – local authorities to provide information  Register of Dwellings being established (7.5m owners)  Register of Special Dwellings to be developed  Linking registers + data protection = aggregate data  Slovenia  Registers Dwellings in establishment phase  eDatabase of Households being computerised  CPR – relationships among persons not complete

European Commission Germany - Issues  Rough Sleepers / Emergency Accommodation  Not registered at any registry office  Register of Special Buildings  Definition and identification issues  Homeless accommodation diverse (budgets, providers)  Fictitious addresses (welfare departments)  Community, institutional and emergency accommodation  Combined in a common group  Homeless may be counted but can not be identified

European Commission Slovenia - Issues  Register of Buildings  “buildings for special purposes” - maternity homes, shelters and asylums, homes for the elderly, student dorms  The Residence Registration Act (2006)  registers homeless at agency where they receive help  requires a complete register of services  requires ability to identify homeless services  Living with Family/friends will be excluded  Buildings not intended for habitation  CPR needs cross-reference to Register of Buildings

European Commission Core Variables  In the Measuring Homelessness report we proposed a set of Core Variables about homeless people  This was a restricted number of variables which should be collected across Europe using the same definitions  This would provide the basis for information about the profile of homeless people in Europe.  We carried out a survey of 20 countries to test the proposed core data set

European Commission Core variables  Research carried out by Mphasis project and national partners  Questionnaires sent to 20 countries  20 responses from 15 countries  Each of the proposed core variables is used by a majority of the existing systems  All systems collect data on age and sex of homeless people

European Commission Core variables  Most systems collect information on Nationality, Country of birth and Household structures/living situations.  Some modifications are suggested to align these variables with Eurostat recommendations for core social variables.  The majority of systems collect information about previous accommodation, duration of homelessness and reasons for homelessness.  Lower levels of standardisation of variables in these areas.  Some changes to variables are proposed but each category should be maintained.