Acerca de
Datos Responsables para la Infancia

Acerca de

Orientación, herramientas y liderazgo para promover el tratamiento responsable de los datos para y sobre la infancia.

Los datos sobre la infancia están en todas partes

Nuestra era digital se caracteriza por los grandes avances en la forma en que registramos los acontecimientos importantes: al nacer, en el médico, en la escuela, en el hogar y cuando los niños y niñas piden ayuda. Estos avances han sido fundamentales para garantizar que los derechos y el bienestar de la infancia se respeten desde el inicio de sus vidas. Gracias a ellos, los niños y niñas tienen acceso a servicios de salud, educación, protección legal y otros servicios esenciales.

Sin embargo, esta mayor visibilidad, derivada de la recopilación constante de información digital, también presenta enormes desafíos. Los mismos datos que las instituciones utilizan para ayudar a los niños y niñas, pueden ser utilizados de forma indebida o incluso malintencionada, poniendo en riesgo su privacidad y seguridad o haciéndolos más vulnerables ante posibles daños.

Lo anterior plantea un dilema: ¿cómo podemos promover el uso adecuado de los datos a la vez que minimizamos los riesgos?

¿Qué necesitan los organismos gubernamentales, las organizaciones internacionales, la sociedad civil y las personas en general para tratar los datos de manera responsable, eficaz y respetando siempre los intereses y necesidades de la infancia?

Quiénes somos

Datos Responsables para la Infancia es una iniciativa de UNICEF y el Laboratorio de Gobernanza (The GovLab) de la Universidad de Nueva York para promover el tratamiento responsable de los datos para y sobre la infancia.

A través de este sitio, ofrecemos un conjunto de herramientas y recursos que permiten a altos funcionarios, gestores de proyectos, defensores de los niños y personas corrientes disponer de los conocimientos necesarios para garantizar que los derechos e intereses de los niños sigan siendo una parte central de nuestro mundo digital.

También ofrecemos información sobre algunas de nuestras colaboraciones en todo el mundo, incluidos nuestros proyectos con gobiernos, oficinas nacionales de la ONU, grupos de la sociedad civil y otros que desempeñan un papel integral en la promoción del potencial de la próxima generación.

Nuestro enfoque de un vistazo

La iniciativa Datos Responsables para la Infancia busca concienciar sobre la necesidad de prestar especial atención a cuestiones relativas a los datos que afectan a la infancia, sobre todo en esta era de cambios tecnológicos e interconexión de datos. Su singularidad radica en su enfoque, guiado por principios para la responsabilidad en el uso de datos.

Conscientes de que cada país tiene sus propias políticas y normativa en materia de datos, queremos servir como complemento y ofrecer un marco flexible que pueda cubrir los vacíos derivados de normas que a menudo son más “rígidas”.  

Este enfoque nos permite ser más accesibles, adaptándonos a la realidad de cada organización; y servir de referente, ofreciendo una especie de “estrella polar” hacia la que avanzar.

Este enfoque basado en principios fue desarrollado por UNICEF y The GovLab tras una extensa investigación, visitas a socios y debates con nuestra red de expertos. Lo hemos aplicado a proyectos conjuntos con ACNUR y otras organizaciones.

Equipo

Contamos con un equipo comprometido de investigación y defensoría

Conoce a las personas que hay detrás de la iniciativa Datos Responsables para la Infancia y los distintos proyectos en los que están trabajando.

Eugenia Olliaro

Eugenia Olliaro

Eugenia Olliaro

ex-UNICEF

Eugenia Olliaro served as a Programme Manager at UNICEF headquarters and the global UNICEF lead of the Responsible Data for Children (RD4C) initiative. Through the initiative, Eugenia advocated for a more responsible data handling culture within UNICEF and partners (governments, CSOs, and others), and supported UNICEF offices and programmes to promote the best interest of the child when using data for and about them. Eugenia's law background has brought her to work in different countries with academia, CSOs and a worker's union. She worked for UNICEF for several years and was posted in Kenya and Tajikistan before moving to headquarters in NY.

Friederike Schueuer

Friederike Schueuer

Friederike Schueuer

UNICEF

As Chief, Data Governance and Strategy, Friederike Schueuer leads data governance and strategy initiatives at UNICEF headquarters. In part, her work is to improve data governance good practice within UNICEF as an organization, enabling UNICEF staff to make the most of UNICEF and partner data. In part, her work is to support partners including governments to implement child needs-centric data governance principles in practice and context through the Responsible Data for Children (RD4C) initiative. Prior to UNICEF, Friederike served in roles across the private sector and academia, giving her a broad perspective on new capabilities, emerging opportunities, and paths to impact.

Huayizi Chen

Huayizi Chen

Huayizi Chen

UNICEF

Huayizi is a consultant for UNICEF's Data Governance Fit for Children Programme, where she leads youth engagement initiatives and communication strategies. She also conducts research to develop policy recommendations on data governance. Previously, she worked with international media organizations, including The New York Times and Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. She holds a Master of Public Policy from the University of Oxford.

Krisana Messerli

Krisana Messerli

Krisana Messerli

ex-UNICEF

Krisana Messerli served as a Programme Officer at UNICEF’s Chief Data Office at Headquarters. She worked on the Data Governance fit for Children Programme and in particular its implementation in Administrative Data Systems. Krisana previously worked for the UN Resident Coordinator Office in Burundi where she contributed to the development of the UN Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework (UNSDCF), notably the M&E framework and worked closely with UN entities, bilateral development partners and the National Statistical Office on questions pertaining to the modernization of the national statistical system. Prior to that, she spent two years working for UNFPA in Bolivia, working both on Gender-based violence as well as population data.

Sara Marcucci

Sara Marcucci

Sara Marcucci

The GovLab

Sara Marcucci is a Research Fellow at The GovLab, and her work focuses on data governance, tech policy, and digital rights. Before joining The GovLab, she worked at the Open Data Institute in London, where she advised the UK Government and the EU Commission developing policy options to create an enabling environment for bottom-up data institutions. Previous to that, Sara worked as a research and project manager at Nesta Italia, where she oversaw the Tech for Good department, focusing on projects related to democratic innovation, Internet governance, and citizen participation. She holds a MSc in Data & Society from the London School of Economics and Political Science, where she then worked as a researcher and investigated the intersections between datafied urbanism and data justice.

Stefaan Verhulst

Stefaan Verhulst

Stefaan Verhulst

The GovLab

Stefaan G. Verhulst is Co-Founder and Chief Research and Development Officer of the Governance Laboratory @NYU (GovLab) where he is responsible for building a research foundation on how to transform governance using advances in science and technology.

He is the Curator and Editor of the Living Library and The Digest.

Verhulst’s latest scholarship centers on how technology can improve people’s lives and the creation of more effective and collaborative forms of governance. Specifically, he is interested in the perils and promise of collaborative technologies and how to harness the unprecedented volume of information to advance the public good.

Before joining NYU full time, Verhulst spent more than a decade as Chief of Research for the Markle Foundation, where he continues to serve as Senior Advisor. At Markle, an operational foundation based in New York, he was responsible for overseeing strategic research on all the priority areas of the Foundation including, for instance: transforming health care using information and technology, re-engineering government to respond to new national security threats, improving people’s lives in developing countries by connecting them to information networks, developing multi-stakeholder networks to tackle global governance challenges, changing education through information technology et al. Many of Markle’s reports have been translated into legislation and executive orders, and have informed the creation of new organizations and businesses.

He is also an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Culture and Communications at New York University, Senior Research Fellow for the Center for Media and Communications Studies at Central European University in Budapest; and an Affiliated Senior Research Fellow at the Center for Global Communications Studies at the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg School for Communications.

Previously at Oxford University he co-founded and was the Head of the Programme in Comparative Media Law and Policy at the Centre for Socio Legal Studies, and also served as Senior Research Fellow of Wolfson College. He is still an emeritus fellow at Oxford. He also taught several years at the London School of Economics.

Verhulst was the UNESCO Chairholder in Communications Law and Policy for the UK, a former lecturer on Communications Law and Policy issues in Belgium, and Founder and Co-Director of the International Media and Info-Comms Policy and Law Studies at the University of Glasgow School of Law. He has served as a consultant to numerous international and national organizations, including the Council of Europe, the European Commission, UNESCO, World Bank, UNDP, USAID, the UK Department for International Development among others. He has been a grant recipient of the Bertelsmann Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the Markle Foundation.

Verhulst has authored and co-authored several books, including: In Search of the Self: Conceptual Approaches to Internet Self Regulation (Routledge, 2001); Convergence in European Communications Regulation (Blackstone, 1999); EC Media Law and Policy (AWL, 1998); Legal Responses to the Changing Media (OUP, 1998); and Broadcasting Reform in India (OUP, 1998) and The Routledge Handbook of Media Law (2013).

Latest reports and papers include, for instance, Innovations in Global Governance: Toward a Distributed Internet Governance Ecosystem (2014) and The Open Data Era in Health and Social Care (2014), and are also available here. Verhulst blogs also regularly on a variety of topics. For instance: Data Collaboratives: Exchanging Data to Improve People’s Lives (2015), and Reimagining Cities (2014).

Verhulst is also founder and editor of numerous journals including the International Journal of Communications Law and Policy, and the Communications Law in Transition Newsletter.

Testimonios

Estamos constantemente buscando oportunidades de apoyar a la juventud y a quienes defienden sus derechos en todo el mundo. En 2024, conversamos con varios de nuestros socios y les pedimos que describieran qué significa para ellos el enfoque de Datos Responsables para la Infancia.