Swiss President Alain Berset set down the challenge as he opened the first ‘Project Rosling’ event in the Swiss City.
Project Rosling has set itself the task of strengthening the role of statistics and data in policy discussions and decision-making.
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A biodegradable paper battery and an AI microphone that can detect wolves are among the Swiss inventions that flew under the radar in 2022.
Achieving this objective entails making more data publicly accessible in a timely and reliable manner.
Project Rosling, named after Swedish statistician Hans Rosling, was conceived from the 2021 United Nations World Data Forum that was hosted in the Swiss capital of Bern.
It has set itself goals in several areas: data literacy (the ability to identify, collect, process, analyse and interpret data); financing data; data stewardship; data science; population projections and climate change and health data.
The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development has set a target for making data more freely accessible to the public.
As the host city to many UN offices and some 750 NGOs, ‘International Geneva’ was seen as the idea place to kick-start Project Rosling.
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Swiss universities rush to join alliances as EU talks stall
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Locked out of key European research and education programmes, Swiss universities are forging another path via alliances with European universities.
Swiss football boss wants crackdown on individual hooligans
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The head of the Swiss Football League says he prefers a harsher approach to individual hooligans rather than collective punishment measures affecting all fans.
Amherd: Council of Europe is ‘as urgently needed as ever’
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The Swiss government emphasised on Sunday the vital role of the Strasbourg-based Council of Europe, 75 years after it was founded.
Swiss minister: Italy will back Switzerland in EU talks
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Bern can count on the backing of Italy as it re-enters talks with the European Union on future relations, Viola Amherd says.
Student protestors at University of Lausanne continue pro-Palestine sit-in
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Since Thursday, a hall on campus has been occupied by students calling for a boycott of Israeli academic institutions and a ceasefire in Gaza.
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Swiss public broadcasters RTS and SRF are drastically reducing their communications via the social network X (formerly Twitter).
Israel: president of Swiss universities rejects academic boycott
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Luciana Vaccaro, president of Swissuniversities, the umbrella group of Swiss universities, is not in favour of an academic boycott of Israeli universities.
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.
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Data centres account for 4% of Swiss electricity usage
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Data centres are expanding rapidly in Switzerland, with such facilities already using more energy than the entire farming sector.
Swiss universities rush to join alliances as EU talks stall
This content was published on
Locked out of key European research and education programmes, Swiss universities are forging another path via alliances with European universities.
Top Swiss inventions you may have missed this year
This content was published on
A biodegradable paper battery and an AI microphone that can detect wolves are among the Swiss inventions that flew under the radar in 2022.
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If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.