BRIDGETOWN, BARBADOS – In a landmark regional collaboration, Caribbean statistical experts and government officials are converging in Barbados to master next-generation population data techniques. The intensive five-day workshop, running from March 9-13, 2026, represents a strategic effort to transform how nations plan for climate adaptation, economic development, and social services through advanced demographic analysis.
Hosted at Hotel Indigo in Bridgetown, the initiative brings together an unprecedented coalition including CARICOM, UNFPA, WorldPop, the UK’s FCDO, and the European Union’s Joint Research Centre. The curriculum focuses on two transformative methodologies: sophisticated population modeling for small-area estimates and the globally standardized Degree of Urbanisation (DEGURBA) framework.
Jenny Karlsen, Acting Head of UNFPA’s Caribbean Sub-Regional Office, emphasized the paradigm shift in demographic science. ‘Emerging tools are fundamentally expanding our analytical capabilities,’ she noted. ‘Where traditional censuses provided periodic snapshots, we now combine modeling with satellite-derived settlement data to create dynamic, high-resolution population maps.’
The DEGURBA methodology establishes consistent criteria for classifying areas as rural, peri-urban, or urban based on settlement density and spatial configuration – resolving longstanding comparability issues that hampered regional planning. Since 2023, UNFPA and EU partners have extended this framework to nearly 50 nations worldwide.
Jennifer Hunte, Permanent Secretary for Economic Affairs and Planning, underscored the practical implications: ‘Granular population data directly informs infrastructure investment, healthcare deployment, and educational resource allocation. This isn’t about statistics – it’s about ensuring development policies reach every community effectively.’
Dr. Armstrong Alexis, CARICOM Deputy Secretary-General, highlighted the urgency behind the initiative: ‘Climate vulnerability, migration patterns, and demographic changes require evidence-based responses. Standardized data enables coordinated regional resilience planning that transcends national boundaries.’
The workshop’s practical component involves developing validated small-area population estimates using census data, satellite imagery, and predictive modeling. This technical capacity building aims to create policy-relevant data streams that can target investments toward vulnerable populations, particularly women, youth, and climate-affected communities.
This collaboration exemplifies how regional partnerships are overcoming the limitations of individual national statistical systems. By creating shared methodologies and data infrastructures, Caribbean nations are pioneering a new model of evidence-based governance for sustainable development in an era of global challenges.
