(Press-News.org) Researchers are warning that millions of people around the world aren’t being counted in census and survey data, leaving policymakers in the dark about the populations they govern.
They say a ‘quiet crisis’ is unfolding with census data due to declining response rates and concerns about the accuracy of the data.
In a paper published in Science, researchers from the University of Southampton and Columbia University point to a ‘perfect storm’ of disruptions from the COVID-19 pandemic, declining confidence in institutions, and collapsing international support.
It says recent cuts to international aid budgets from the USA, the UK, and other European countries will worsen the situation.
“Lack of census data compromises all areas of public administration, but we don’t see these statistics in the same way as other vital infrastructure, like bridges or roads,” says Dr Jessica Espey, lead author of the paper from the University of Southampton and Deputy Director of its WorldPop research team, which provides data on population distribution, demographics and dynamics.
“When groups are not counted, they can be left off the policy agenda. That political underrepresentation and the inadequate resource allocation that follows can have pernicious effects.”
Decisions about where to build a hospital or how to allocate resources for schools rely on knowing how many people live where and who they are. This information is especially important during a crisis, such as an outbreak of disease or a natural disaster.
Censuses, a device of government administration since Roman times, provide these data allowing governments to direct resources and anticipate future challenges and opportunities, such as an ageing population or a burgeoning younger one.
But the percentage of the world’s population covered by up-to-date censuses, conducted every ten years, has declined. Additionally, 24 of the 204 countries that carried out a census between 2015 and 2024, representing a quarter of the world’s population, haven’t published their results.
Census post-enumeration surveys, which independently assess the completeness of a census, suggest a decline in accuracy and coverage. The 2020 US Census likely undercounted the US Latino population by 2.9 million people, while the 2022 South African census undercounted its overall population by up to 31%. The UN estimates that one in three Africans were not counted in the 2020 census round.
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted traditional house-to-house interviews and impacted funding. Researchers also highlight growing distrust in national governments, with some communities fearing immigration-related law-enforcement or AI-supported decision-making will use their data against them, and others worried about the threat of data leaks and cyber-attacks.
In February of this year, the Trump administration cut support for the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) program, which provided vital data on populations across 90 countries for four decades, often filling gaps left by lack of census data. Other countries like the UK, France, and the Netherlands have reallocated development assistance to defence spending, reducing both direct assistance to countries and also to UN agencies that provide support on censuses and surveys.
“We live in an era of seemingly unlimited data, yet some of our most essential demographic information is deteriorating, introducing known and unknown bias into decision making,” says co-author Dr Dana Thomson from Columbia University.
The researchers say new technologies, such as AI-derived building footprints from satellite images, can support the planning and implementation of censuses and potentially reduce costs, pointing to recent successes in multiple countries that WorldPop has supported, such as the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
They also say governments need to do more to build trust, demonstrate how census data affects people's daily lives and be transparent about how this data is used to inform decisions.
Professor Andrew Tatem, a coauthor of the paper who leads WorldPop at Southampton, says: “In an era of growing challenges, from climate change to economic inequality, accurate population data is not a luxury – it is essential infrastructure for healthy, resilient, functioning societies.
“The current undercounting of populations creates a negative feedback loop, leaving governments with less accurate information on the communities most in need. This threatens both statistical accuracy and the very foundations of equitable governance.
“By combining technological innovation with renewed public trust and international cooperation, we can ensure that everyone is counted – and everyone counts.”
Disappearing People: how the global demographic data crisis threatens public policy is published in Science and is available online.
Contact
Steve Williams, Media Manager, University of Southampton, press@soton.ac.uk or 023 8059 3212.
Notes for editors
Disappearing People: how the global demographic data crisis threatens public policy is published in Science. An advanced copy is available upon request.
For Interviews with Dr Jessica Espey and Professor Andrew Tatem please contact Steve Williams, Media Manager, University of Southampton press@soton.ac.uk or 023 8059 3212.
You can find out more about WorldPop here: www.worldpop.org
Additional information
The University of Southampton drives original thinking, turns knowledge into action and impact, and creates solutions to the world’s challenges. We are among the top 100 institutions globally (QS World University Rankings 2025). Our academics are leaders in their fields, forging links with high-profile international businesses and organisations, and inspiring a 22,000-strong community of exceptional students, from over 135 countries worldwide. Through our high-quality education, the University helps students on a journey of discovery to realise their potential and join our global network of over 200,000 alumni. www.southampton.ac.uk
www.southampton.ac.uk/news/contact-press-team.page
Follow us on X: https://twitter.com/UoSMedia
END
More and more people missing from official data
Foreign aid cuts will worsen ‘quiet crisis’, say experts
2025-06-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Two transparent worms shed light on evolution
2025-06-19
Two species of worms have retained remarkably similar patterns in the way they switch their genes on and off despite having split from a common ancestor 20 million years ago, a new study finds.
The findings appear in the June 19 issue of the journal Science
“It was just remarkable, with this evolutionary distance, that we should see such coherence in gene expression patterns,” said Dr. Robert Waterston, professor of genome sciences at the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle and a co-senior author of the paper. “I was surprised how well everything lined ...
Environment: Offsetting fossil fuel reserves by planting trees faces ‘unsurmountable challenges’
2025-06-19
New forests larger than the land area of North America would need to be planted to offset the potential carbon dioxide emissions from the fossil fuel reserves currently held by the world’s 200 largest fossil fuels companies. The finding comes from an analysis published in Communications Earth & Environment, which also suggests that most of the companies would have a negative market valuation if the cost to offset their entire reserves was deducted from their current valuation.
Future emissions scenarios usually include both a reduction in carbon dioxide emissions and some offsetting of these emissions. Offsetting is necessary as most scenarios assume that during ...
Not one, but four – revealing the hidden species diversity of bluebottles
2025-06-19
Long believed to be a single, globally distributed species drifting freely across the open ocean, the bluebottle – also known as the Portuguese man o’ war – has now been revealed to be a group of at least four distinct species, each with its own unique morphology, genetics, and distribution.
An international research team led by scientists at Yale University, and Australian researchers at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) and Griffith University, uncovered this surprising biodiversity by sequencing the genomes of 151 Physalia specimens from around the world.
The study, published in Current Biology, found strong evidence ...
Different brain profiles, same symptoms: New study reveals subtyping patients provides key insights into depression's complexities
2025-06-19
Philadelphia, June 19, 2025 – A novel study aimed at disentangling the neurological underpinnings of depression shows that multiple brain profiles may manifest as the same clinical symptoms, providing evidence to support the presence of both one-to-one and many-to-one heterogeneity in depression. The findings of the study in Biological Psychiatry, published by Elsevier, highlight the layered and complex interactions between clinical symptoms and neurobiological sources of variation.
John Krystal, MD, Editor of Biological Psychiatry, ...
Researchers demonstrate precise optical clock signal transmission via multicore fiber
2025-06-19
WASHINGTON — Researchers have shown, for the first time, that transmission of ultrastable optical signals from optical clocks across tens of kilometers of deployed multicore fiber is compatible with simultaneous transmission of telecommunications data. The achievement demonstrates that these emerging high-capacity fiber optic networks could be used to connect optical clocks at various locations, enabling new scientific applications.
As global data demands continue to surge, multicore fiber is being installed to help overcome the limits of existing networks. These fibers pack multiple light-guiding cores ...
National Heart Centre Singapore and Mayo Clinic to advance cardiovascular care and research
2025-06-19
Singapore, 20 June 2025 – The National Heart Centre Singapore (NHCS) and Mayo Clinic have collaborated under a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to accelerate cardiovascular innovation and research, and to foster knowledge for future cardiovascular care worldwide.
Advancing Cardiovascular Care, Research and Knowledge Exchange
The collaboration brings together Mayo Clinic's expertise with NHCS's deep understanding of Asian cardiovascular health. By establishing a collaborative platform for knowledge exchange, the joint effort will hope to create new opportunities ...
2025 Warren Alpert Prize honors scientists whose discoveries culminated in novel HIV treatment
2025-06-19
The 2025 Warren Alpert Foundation Prize has been awarded to three scientists whose discoveries culminated in the development of lenacapavir, a medication used to treat and prevent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and the first approved drug to disrupt a viral capsid, a critical piece of the viral machinery that allows it to replicate.
Because this therapy — more potent than any other HIV drug — is given only twice a year and can prevent HIV infection, it carries the promise to accelerate the end of the HIV epidemic.
The three recipients are:
Tomas Cihlar, ...
Here’s why migraine symptoms are worse in patients who get little sleep
2025-06-19
For the first time, researchers have studied what happens in the brains of people who have migraines when they haven’t slept enough.
Migraine is characterized by pulsating headaches, photophobia, vomiting, nausea and increased sensitivity to sound. The disease affects about fifteen per cent of the Norwegian population, which roughly the same as the global incidence.
Migraine is the leading cause of disability in people between the ages of 16 and 50.
"These are important years in one’s life when it comes to school, higher education ...
Impact of co-exposure of bisphenol A and retinoic acid on brain development
2025-06-19
Synthetic chemicals and plastics are useful and indispensable in our lives. On the other hand, the world is grappling with plastic pollution—clogging oceans, threatening wildlife, and leaching into ecosystems. While eco-friendly alternatives are on the way, researchers have been trying to identify the various effects of the synthetic plastics present within the ecosystem.
Bisphenol A (BPA) is a common chemical used in synthetic plastics and is known to act as an endocrine disruptor. Upon ...
Nanobody-based 3D immunohistochemistry allows rapid visualization in thick tissue samples
2025-06-19
Three dimensional immunohistochemistry (3D-IHC) has transformed our ability to visualize the spatial arrangement of cells and molecules in intact tissues. However, traditional methods are often time-consuming and suffer from poor antibody penetration, which limits their effectiveness in deep tissues. This bottleneck has posed significant challenges in neuroscience, pathology, and biomedical imaging, where rapid and detailed mapping of large tissue volumes is essential.
To address these issues, researchers at Juntendo University in Tokyo, Japan, Assistant Professor Kenta Yamauchi ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Paper outlines more efficient organic photoredox catalysis system inspired by photosynthesis
Plastic bag bans: Study finds up to 47% drop in shoreline bag litter
Plastic bag policies are effective in reducing shoreline litter in the US
Current chemical monitoring data hinders global water risk evaluations
New method enables in vivo generation of CAR T cells to treat cancer and autoimmune disease
Decline in population data collection threatens global public policy
Ocean ‘greening’ at poles could spell changes for fisheries
No data, no risk? How the monitoring of chemicals in the environment shapes the perception of risks
More and more people missing from official data
Two transparent worms shed light on evolution
Environment: Offsetting fossil fuel reserves by planting trees faces ‘unsurmountable challenges’
Not one, but four – revealing the hidden species diversity of bluebottles
Different brain profiles, same symptoms: New study reveals subtyping patients provides key insights into depression's complexities
Researchers demonstrate precise optical clock signal transmission via multicore fiber
National Heart Centre Singapore and Mayo Clinic to advance cardiovascular care and research
2025 Warren Alpert Prize honors scientists whose discoveries culminated in novel HIV treatment
Here’s why migraine symptoms are worse in patients who get little sleep
Impact of co-exposure of bisphenol A and retinoic acid on brain development
Nanobody-based 3D immunohistochemistry allows rapid visualization in thick tissue samples
New study finds self-esteem surges within one year of weight-loss surgery
Study: Iron plays a major role in down syndrome-associated Alzheimer’s disease
Herpes virus plays interior designer with human DNA
Arctic peatlands expanding as climate warms
When Earth iced over, early life may have sheltered in meltwater ponds
Alps could face a doubling in torrential summer rainfall frequency as temperatures rise by 2°C
Fitness trackers for people with obesity miss the mark. This algorithm will fix that.
“The models were right”: Astronomers find ‘missing’ matter
UBC scientists propose blueprint for 'universal translator' in quantum networks
Some of your AI prompts could cause 50 times more CO2 emissions than others
Pandora’s microbes – The battle for iron in the lungs
[Press-News.org] More and more people missing from official dataForeign aid cuts will worsen ‘quiet crisis’, say experts