Bureau of the United Nations Statistical Commission

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Bureau of the United Nations Statistical Commission Bureau of the United Nations Statistical Commission Chair Vice-chairs Rapporteur Year Session Name Country Name Country Name Country 2021 52nd Mr. Shigeru Kawasaki Japan Mr. Anil Arora Canada Mr. Osman Sankoh Sierra Leone Ms. Gabriella Vukovich Hungary Mr. Julio Alfonso Santaella Castell Mexico 2020 51st Mr. Shigeru Kawasaki Japan Ms. Irina Kangro Belarus Mr. Osman Sankoh Sierra Leone Mr. Julio Alfonso Santaella Castell Mexico Mr. Anil Arora Canada 2019 50th Mr. Zachary Mwangi Chege Kenya Mr. Masato Aida Japan Mr. Tudorel Andrei Romania Mr. Julio Alfonso Santaella Castell Mexico Mr. Anil Arora Canada 2018 49th Mr. Zachary Mwangi Chege Kenya Mr. Masato Aida Japan Mr. Georges-Simon Ulrich Switzerland Mr. Julio Alfonso Santaella Castell Mexico Mr. Tudorel Andrei Romania 2017 48th Ms. Wasmália Bivar Brazil Mr. Zachary Mwangi Kenya Ms. Aija Zigure Latvia Mr. Gyeongjoon Yoo Republic of Korea Mr. Georges-Simon Ulrich Switzerland 2016 47th Ms. Wasmália Bivar Brazil Mr. Zachary Mwangi Kenya Ms. Aija Zigure Latvia Mr. Gyeongjoon Yoo Republic of Korea Mr. John Pullinger United Kingdom 2015 46th Mr. John Pullinger United Kingdom Ms. Gabriella Vukovich Hungary Mr. Joseph Tedou Cameroon Mr. Ma Jiantang China Mr. Aubrey Browne Barbados 2014 45th Ms. Jil Matheson United Kingdom Ms. Gabriella Vukovich Hungary Mr. Joseph Tedou Cameroon Mr. Ma Jiantang China Mr. Pablo Tactuk Dominican Republic 2013 44th Ms. Gabriella Vukovich Hungary Ms. Jill Matheson United Kingdom Mr. Joseph Tedou Cameroon Mr. Ma Jiantang China Mr. Pablo Tactuk Dominican Republic 2012 43rd Ms. Gabriella Vukovich Hungary Ms. Jill Matheson United Kingdom Ms. Anna N. Majelantle Botswana Mr. Ma Jiantang China Mr. Eduardo Sojo Mexico 2011 42nd Mr. Ali bin Mahboob Al-Raisi Oman Oman Mr. Brian Pink Australia Ms. Anna N. Majelantle Botswana Mr. Alexander Surinov Russian Federation Mr. Eduardo Sojo Mexico 2010 41st Mr. Ali bin Mahboob Al-Raisi Oman Oman Mr. Brian Pink Australia Mr. Iwan Sno Suriname Suriname Mr. Alexander Surinov Russian Federation Ms. Anna N. Majelantle Botswana 2009 40th Mr. Pali Lehohla South Africa Mr. Jean-Philippe Cotis France Mr. Ali Bin Mahboob bin Hassan Oman Mr. Igor Uliyanov Russian Federation Mr. Iwan Sno Suriname 2008 39th Mr. Pali Lehohla South Africa Ms. Heli Jeskanen-Sundström Finland Mr. Péter Pukli Hungary Mr. Héctor Maldonado Gómez Colombia Mr. Ali Bin Mahboob bin Hassan Oman 2007 38th Mr. Gilberto Calvillo Vives Mexico Ms. Heli Jeskanen-Sundström Finland Mr. Péter Pukli Hungary Mr. Pali Lehohla South Africa Mr. Xie Fuzhan China 2006 37th Mr. Gilberto Calvillo Vives Mexico Ms. Heli Jeskanen-Sundström Finland Mr. Pali Lehohla South Africa Mr. Vladimir Sokolin Russian Federation Mr. Zhang Weimin China 2005 36th Ms. Katherine Wallman United States Ms. Grace Bediako Ghana Mr. Gilberto Calvillo Vives Mexico Mr. Vladimir Sokolin Russian Federation Mr. Li Deshui China 2004 35th Ms. Katherine Wallman United States Mr. Gilberto Calvillo Vives Mexico Mr. Kwaku A. Twum-Baah Ghana Mr. Vladimir Sokolin Russian Federation Mr. Jong-Nam Oh Republic of Korea 2003 34th Mr. Tamás Mellár Hungary Mr. Gilberto Calvillo Vives Mexico Mr. Pali Lehohla South Africa Mr. K. K. Jaswal India Ms. Katherine Wallman United States 2002 33rd Mr. Tamás Mellár Hungary Mr. Nicholas Karavitis Greece Mr. Pali Lehohla South Africa Mr. Gilberto Moncada Peru Mr. Kenichi Hirayama Japan 2001 32nd Mr. Shigeru Kawasak Japan Mr. Dennis Trewin Australia Mr. Victor Dinculescu Romania Mr. Gilberto Moncada Peru Mr. Guest Charumbira Botswana 2000 31st Mr. Guest Charumbira Botswana Mr. Fitz-Albert Russell Jamaica Mr. Masahiro Horie Japan Mr. Victor Dinculescu Romania Ms. Katherine Wallman United States 1999 30th Mr. Guest Charumbira Botswana Mr. Miguel Cervera Flores Mexico Mr. M. D. Asthana India Mr. Victor Dinculescu Romania Ms. Katherine Wallman United States 1997 29th Mr. Carlos Jarque Mexico Mr. Edvard Outrata Czech Republic Mr. Guest Charumbira Botswana Mr. S. Sathyam India Mr. Tim Holt United Kingdom 1995 28th Mr. William McLennan United Kingdom Mr. Carlos Jarque Mexico Ms. Chris Denell Sweden Mr. Zhang Sai China Mr. Y. Yurkov Russian Federation 1994 Special session Mr. Jozef Olenski Poland Mr. Héctor Eduardo Montero Argentina Mr. William McLennan United Kingdom Mr. R. Thamarajakshi India Mr. David Diangamo Zambia 1993 27th Mr. Willem Begeer Netherlands Mr. Hiroyasu Kudo Japan Mr. Jothan Antony Mwaniki Kenya Mr. Miguel Cervera Flores Mexico Mr. Josef Olenski Poland 1991 26th Mr. Willen Begeer Netherlands Mr. Eduardo Augusto Guimaraes Brazil Mr. Jothan Antony Mwaniki Kenya Mr. Hiroyasu Kudo Japan Mr. Ivan Sujan Czechoslovakia 1989 25th Mr. Luis Alberto Beccaria Argentina Mr. Hermann Habermann United States Mr. Awad Mokhtar Hallouda Egypt Mr. Hiroyasu Kudo Japan Mr. Mikhail Antonovich Korolev Soviet Union 1987 24th Mr. Emmanuel Oti Boateng Ghana Mr. Luis Alberto Beccaria Argentina Mr. Stephen Kuzmicich New Zealand Mr. Vladimir Micka Czechoslovakia Mr. Awad Mokhtar Hallouda Egypt 1985 23rd Mr. Thomas P. Linehan Ireland Mr. Jesse de Souza Montello Brazil Mr. Emmanuel Oti Boateng Ghana Mr. Vladimir Micka Czechoslovakia Mr. Kiron Chandra Seal India 1983 22nd Ms. Vera Nyitrai Hungary Mr. Lelia Boeri de Cervetto Argentina Mr. Khoo Teik Huat Malaysia Mr. Thomas P. Linehan Ireland Mr. Emmanuel Oti Boateng Ghana 1981 21st Mr. Joseph W. Duncan United States Ms. Vera Nyitrai Hungary Mr. John Boreham United Kingdom Mr. Kiron Chandra Seal India Mr. Parmeet Singh Kenya 1979 20th Mr. Mikhail Antonovich Korolev Soviet Union Mr. Joseph W. Duncan United States Mr. Thomas P. Linehan Ireland Mr. Isaac Kerstenetzky Brazil Mr. Parmeet Singh Kenya 1976 19th Mr. V. R. Rao India Mr. Mikhail Antonovich Korolev Soviet Union Mr. Joseph W. Duncan United States Mr. I. Ohlsson Sweden 1974 18th Mr. Claus Moser United Kingdom Mr. L. M. Volodarsky Soviet Union Mr. I. Ohlsson Sweden Mr. R. Chander Malaysia 1972 17th Mr. Jean Ripert France Mr. Jan Kazimour Czechoslovakia Mr. Claus Moser United Kingdom Mr. R. Chander Malaysia 1970 16th Mr. Jean Ripert France Mr. Jan Kazimour Czechoslovakia Mr. Claus Moser United Kingdom 1968 15th Mr. Keith Archer Australia Mr. Jan Kazimour Czechoslovakia Mr. Walter E. Duffett Canada 1966 14th Mr. Petter Jakob Bjerve Norway Mr. V. F. Burlin Ukrainian SSR Mr. Keith Archer Australia 1965 13th Mr. Petter Jakob Bjerve Norway Mr. M.S. Markin Ukrainian SSR Mr. Keith Archer Australia 1962 12th Mr. Donal McCarthy Ireland Mr. Valentin Fedorovich Burlin Ukrainian SSR Mr. J. V. T. Baker New Zealand 1960 11th Mr. Donal McCarthy Ireland Mr. M. Levente Romania Mr. J. V. T. Baker New Zealand 1958 10th Mr. George Wood New Zealand Mr. M. Levente Romania Mr. Donal McCarthy Ireland 1956 9th Mr. P. C. Mahalanobis India Mr. Dolfe Vogelnik Yugoslavia Mr. Philip. Idenburg Netherlands 1954 8th Mr. P. C. Mahalanobis India Mr. R. Rivet France Mr. Philip Idenburg Netherlands 1953 7th Mr. Harry Campion United Kingdom Ms. C. A. Miro Panama Mr. P. C. Mahalanobis India 1951 6th Mr. Harry Campion United Kingdom Ms. C. A. Miro Panama Mr. P. C. Mahalanobis India 1950 5th Mr. Philip Idenburg Netherlands Mr. G. Darmois France Mr. Harry Campion United Kingdom 1949 4th Mr. Philip Idenburg Netherlands Mr. V. A. Ryabichko Ukrainian SSR Mr. Harry Campion United Kingdom 1948 3rd Mr. Herbert Marshall Canada Mr. P. C. Mahalanobis India Mr. Stuart A. Rice United States 1947 2nd Mr. Herbert Marshall Canada Mr. P. C. Mahalanobis India Mr. Stuart A. Rice United States 1947 1st Mr. Herbert Marshall Canada Mr. P. C. Mahalanobis India Mr. Stuart A. Rice United States 1946 Nuclear Mr. Stuart A. Rice United States.
Recommended publications
  • Statistics Making an Impact
    John Pullinger J. R. Statist. Soc. A (2013) 176, Part 4, pp. 819–839 Statistics making an impact John Pullinger House of Commons Library, London, UK [The address of the President, delivered to The Royal Statistical Society on Wednesday, June 26th, 2013] Summary. Statistics provides a special kind of understanding that enables well-informed deci- sions. As citizens and consumers we are faced with an array of choices. Statistics can help us to choose well. Our statistical brains need to be nurtured: we can all learn and practise some simple rules of statistical thinking. To understand how statistics can play a bigger part in our lives today we can draw inspiration from the founders of the Royal Statistical Society. Although in today’s world the information landscape is confused, there is an opportunity for statistics that is there to be seized.This calls for us to celebrate the discipline of statistics, to show confidence in our profession, to use statistics in the public interest and to champion statistical education. The Royal Statistical Society has a vital role to play. Keywords: Chartered Statistician; Citizenship; Economic growth; Evidence; ‘getstats’; Justice; Open data; Public good; The state; Wise choices 1. Introduction Dictionaries trace the source of the word statistics from the Latin ‘status’, the state, to the Italian ‘statista’, one skilled in statecraft, and on to the German ‘Statistik’, the science dealing with data about the condition of a state or community. The Oxford English Dictionary brings ‘statistics’ into English in 1787. Florence Nightingale held that ‘the thoughts and purpose of the Deity are only to be discovered by the statistical study of natural phenomena:::the application of the results of such study [is] the religious duty of man’ (Pearson, 1924).
    [Show full text]
  • Survey Methodology
    Catalogue no. 12-001-XIE Survey Methodology December 2007 Statistics Statistique Canada Canada How to obtain more information Specifi c inquiries about this product and related statistics or services should be directed to: Business Survey Methods Division, Statistics Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0T6 (telephone: 1-800-263-1136). For information on the wide range of data available from Statistics Canada, you can contact us by calling one of our toll-free numbers. You can also contact us by e-mail or by visiting our website at www.statcan.ca. National inquiries line 1-800-263-1136 National telecommunications device for the hearing impaired 1-800-363-7629 Depository Services Program inquiries 1-800-700-1033 Fax line for Depository Services Program 1-800-889-9734 E-mail inquiries [email protected] Website www.statcan.ca Accessing and ordering information This product, catalogue no. 12-001-XIE, is available for free in electronic format. To obtain a single issue, visit our website at www.statcan.ca and select Publications. This product, catalogue no. 12-001-XPB, is also available as a standard printed publication at a price of CAN$30.00 per issue and CAN$58.00 for a one-year subscription. The following additional shipping charges apply for delivery outside Canada: Single issue Annual subscription United States CAN$6.00 CAN$12.00 Other countries CAN$10.00 CAN$20.00 All prices exclude sales taxes. The printed version of this publication can be ordered by • Phone (Canada and United States) 1-800-267-6677 • Fax (Canada and United States) 1-877-287-4369 • E-mail [email protected] • Mail Statistics Canada Finance Division R.H.
    [Show full text]
  • Royal Statistical Society Duties of Council Members Council Is The
    Royal Statistical Society Duties of Council members Council is the governing body of the Society and its members are elected by the Fellowship. Council sets the long term strategy, the business plan and oversight of all the RSS’s many activities including financial matters. Council members are elected to serve for a maximum term of office of 4 years. Members attend the RSS Council which meets 5 times a year at Errol Street in London to conduct its formal meetings. These meetings are from 11am-4pm and are in: January, April, July, October and December. New members are invited to attend the December meeting prior to the session for which they have been elected. Members usually become involved, as a Council representative, in other areas of the RSS for example, by serving on a standing committee, section committee, working party or theme. Some members, who already serve the Society in another capacity, may not have the time to take on a further role but usually many do. Involvement in other areas does not necessarily require attendance at meetings. Each of the 12 themes (which support the delivery and development of the RSS’s activities) are developing support or consultation groups which members are encouraged to join and often this is conducted by email. Council members are not only trustees of the Society but are ambassadors for furthering the Society’s aims. Members of Council are sometimes asked to represent the President at formal functions or other events and all Council members are invited to get involved in specific activities such as: • Joining the media contacts list; • Promoting membership of the Society to colleagues; • Talking to students or school children about statistics.
    [Show full text]
  • Quality Work Within Statistics
    ▲ EDITION 1999 Quality Work and Quality Assurance within Statistics EUROPEAN THEME 0 COMMISSION 0Miscellaneous 2 FOREWORD Statistics & quality go hand-in-hand Quality of statistics was the theme of the annual conference of presidents and directors-general of the national sta- tistical institutes (NSIs) of EU and EEA countries, organised in Stockholm on 28-29 May 1998 by Statistics Sweden in collaboration with Eurostat. Quality has always been one of the obvious requirements of statistics, although the notion of 'quality' has changed over the years. Nowadays a statistical 'product' has to exhibit reliability, relevance of concept, promptness, ease of access, clarity, comparability, consistency and exhaustiveness. While all these features form part of the whole prod- uct, individual users will attach more or less importance to each one. When statistics - gross domestic product or inflation, for example - have a financial impact, accuracy and comparability are vital. But if the same data are being used by someone interested in short-term trends, then the speed with which they are made available is the key feature. It is for users to decide. They are the people who determine quality criteria. Statisticians are no longer 'number freaks' in a world of their own, but have become managers of statistics, in constant touch with those who make decisions. Such a transformation is possible only if the whole production process is ready for change, because, as a rule, sci- entists such as statisticians tend not to pay much attention to the needs of people outside their own world. Scientists prefer to talk to other scientists. Now that the need for change is understood, how to bring it about? This question is being addressed by most of those in charge of national statistical institutes.
    [Show full text]
  • Fang Family San Francisco Examiner Photograph Archive Negative Files, Circa 1930-2000, Circa 1930-2000
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/hb6t1nb85b No online items Finding Aid to the Fang family San Francisco examiner photograph archive negative files, circa 1930-2000, circa 1930-2000 Bancroft Library staff The Bancroft Library University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720-6000 Phone: (510) 642-6481 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/ © 2010 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Finding Aid to the Fang family San BANC PIC 2006.029--NEG 1 Francisco examiner photograph archive negative files, circa 1930-... Finding Aid to the Fang family San Francisco examiner photograph archive negative files, circa 1930-2000, circa 1930-2000 Collection number: BANC PIC 2006.029--NEG The Bancroft Library University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720-6000 Phone: (510) 642-6481 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/ Finding Aid Author(s): Bancroft Library staff Finding Aid Encoded By: GenX © 2011 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Collection Summary Collection Title: Fang family San Francisco examiner photograph archive negative files Date (inclusive): circa 1930-2000 Collection Number: BANC PIC 2006.029--NEG Creator: San Francisco Examiner (Firm) Extent: 3,200 boxes (ca. 3,600,000 photographic negatives); safety film, nitrate film, and glass : various film sizes, chiefly 4 x 5 in. and 35mm. Repository: The Bancroft Library. University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720-6000 Phone: (510) 642-6481 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/ Abstract: Local news photographs taken by staff of the Examiner, a major San Francisco daily newspaper.
    [Show full text]
  • The Implications of Centralised, Decentralised and Devolved Arrangements
    The Implications of Centralised, Decentralised and Devolved Arrangements Tim Holt and John Pullinger ABSTRACT Le rôle des Statistiques Officielles est de fournir à la fois un tableau de la société et un aperçu du travail et des actions des gourvernements à tous les niveaux. Ces informations sont nécessaires pour prendre des décisions, allouer des ressources et develloper des politiques. Elles permettent également au citoyen d’évaluer les action gouvernementales et d’être mieux informé afin de jouer un rôle dans le processus démocratique. Nous examinerons ici certaines tendances actuelles en politique et l’impact de ces tendances sur les statistiques officielles. Nous établirons également le fait que ces changements mettent à l’épreuve la façon orthodoxe d’envisager la gestion des statistiques officielles. La globalisation et la dévolution sont deux forces qui exigent de nouvelles structures pour les statistiques officielles si celles ci doivent, et s’épanouir, et répondre à des critères stricts d’utilité pratique, ceci dans un monde où le rôle de l’état, à tous les niveaux, se transforme rapidement dans bon nombre de régions e de sous régions, qui permettraient aux statistiques officielles de perdurer avec succés. Puis, nous fondant sur des exemples historiques et contemporains, nous décrirons quelques pistes de travail à envisager pour l’avenir. Official statistics should provide a picture of society and a window on the work and performance of governments at all levels. In this way they can be said to provide a mirror of the state reflecting the nature of that state and how it relates to its citizens. This paper explores current trends in the political landscape and how those trends are impacting on official statistics.
    [Show full text]
  • Performance Indicators: Good, Bad, and Ugly
    J. R. Statist. Soc. A (2005) 168, Part 1, pp. 1–27 Performance indicators: good, bad, and ugly [The report of a Working Party on Performance Monitoring in the Public Services chaired by Professor S. M. Bird, submitted on October 23rd, 2003] Membership of the Working Party Sheila M. Bird (Chair) (Medical Research Council Biostatistics Unit, Cambridge, and Department of Statistics and Modelling Science, University of Strathclyde) Sir David Cox FRS (Nuffield College, Oxford) Vern T. Farewell (Medical Research Council Biostatistics Unit, Cambridge) Harvey Goldstein FBA (Institute of Education, University of London) Tim Holt CB (Department of Social Statistics, University of Southampton) Peter C. Smith (Department of Economics and Related Studies, University of York) Summary. A striking feature of UK public services in the 1990s was the rise of performance monitoring (PM), which records, analyses and publishes data in order to give the public a better idea of how Government policies change the public services and to improve their effectiveness. PM done well is broadly productive for those concerned. Done badly, it can be very costly and not merely ineffective but harmful and indeed destructive. Performance indicators (PIs) for the public services have typically been designed to assess the impact of Government policies on those services, or to identify well performing or under- performing institutions and public servants. PIs’ third role, which is the public accountability of Ministers for their stewardship of the public services, deserves equal recognition. Hence, Gov- ernment is both monitoring the public services and being monitored by PIs. Especially because of the Government’s dual role, PM must be done with integrity and shielded from undue political influence, in the way that National Statistics are shielded.
    [Show full text]
  • Occupational Injury Statistics – an Example of Official Statistics at Home and Abroad
    Exeter Initiative for Statistics and its Applications (ExIStA) Kay Building, University of Exeter, 29 February 2012 Occupational injury statistics – An example of official statistics at home and abroad Peter Wingfield-Digby Independent statistical consultant [email protected] www.pwdigby.co.uk 1 A brief history of UK official statistics 1837 General Register Office (GRO) 1941 (Wartime) Central Statistical Social Survey Office (CSO) and govt depts 1967 Government Social Survey 1969 Business Statistics Office (BSO) 1970 Office of Population Censuses and Surveys (OPCS) 1989 Expanded CSO 1996 Office for National Statistics (ONS) 2 National statistics – recent developments Monitoring and reporting on all government statistics 2000 Statistics Commission - Limited functions. Reported to Treasury ‘National Statistics’ – seal of approval (Quality mark) 2007 Statistics and Registration Service Act 2008 Statistics Authority – Independent. Accountable to Parliament (i) Oversight of ONS (ii) Scrutiny of all official statistics Recent Chair – Sir Michael Scholar. New Chair – Andrew Dilnot 2008 Registration function (BMD) moved to IPS, Home Office National Statisticians / Head of government statistical service 2005-09 Karen Dunnell 2009- Jil Matheson 3 Occupational injury Statistics – International perspective Principal data sources in the past: 1. Administrative records of compensations schemes 2. Systems for notifying occupational injuries to labour inspectorates Major problems: Low coverage; Under-reporting of injuries Data quality is a problem
    [Show full text]
  • 50 Years of the Conference of European Statisticians 1
    UNITED NATIONS STATISTICAL COMMISSION and UNITED NATIONS ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR EUROPE 5O YEARS OF THE CONFERENCE OF EUROPEAN STATISTICIANS Conceived by Carlo Malaguerra with contributions by Bodin J.-L., Garonna P., Griffin T., Ivanov Y., Kelly J.J., Korolev M., Malinvaud E., Moser C., Olenski J., Sokolin V., de Vries W., Whitworth J. UNITED NATIONS Geneva, 2003 Conference of European Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies – No. ST/CES/54 ISBN 92-1-116855-4 Foreword The Conference of European Statisticians is an important Principal Subsidiary Body of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe. It celebrated its 50th anniversary plenary session in June 2002. The Conference has achieved a great deal during the past 50 years, and some of these achievements are summarized in the different chapters of this publication. One of the Conference’s major achievements has been the way in which it served as a “bridge” and meeting point throughout the Cold War period for statisticians in Eastern and Western Europe working in the field of Official Statistics. Despite the important differences that characterized market economy countries and centrally planned economy countries and the different approaches they used to measure economic and social phenomena, the statisticians from both groups of countries met regularly in Geneva. Under the auspices of the Conference they discussed and approved statistical standards, exchanged data and collaborated together to improve the international comparability of their national statistics. The development and adoption by the Conference of the Fundamental Principles of Official Statistics in 1991 and their endorsement by the Economic Commission for Europe in 1992 is another major achievement.
    [Show full text]
  • Aglobal Response Events, Recordings Aim to Raise Chesney's Millions for Tsunami Victims
    $6.99 (U.S.), $8.99 (CAN.), £5.50 (U.K.), 8.95 (EUROPE), Y2,500 (JAPAN) aw a zW jjBXNCTCC 3 -DIGIT 908 - _ IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlII111I1lIIIlII11I11III I IIIIIII JtBL2408043$i APR06 A04 B0103 MONTY GREENLY 3740 ELM AVE H A LONG BEACH CA 90807 -3402 1111 NMI lift/ 15, 2005 www.billboard.com THE INTERNATIONAL AUTHORITY ON MUSIC, VIr ''GITAL ENTERTAINMENT ÌIOTH YEAR JANUARY HOT SPOTS Kenny AGlobal Response Events, Recordings Aim To Raise Chesney's Millions For Tsunami Victims A Billboard and Billboard Radio Monitor staff report. 10 Artie Shaw: ATribute As the world continues to respond to the devas- Billboard remembe-s the tation in Southeast Asia following the Dec. 26 late bandleader and clarinetist Choice earthquake and tsunami, the global music com- in a personal tribute by munity is corning together in an unprecedented Tamara Conniff. Country outpouring of support for relief efforts. (Continued on page 60) Star Gets Personal At Caribbean Retreat BY DEBORAH EVANS PRICE 13 He's Game NASHVILLE -After more than a Dr. Dre"s latest protégé, the Game, decade of hit records and relent- creates buzz with his upcoming less touring, Kenny Chesney LINKIN PARK: GRATITUDE, RESPONSIBILITY AND OBLIGATION Aftermath /G -U nit/Interscope ascended to the top of the coun- album debut, "Th2 Documentary." try format last November when he claimed the entertainer of the year prize at the Country Music Assn. Awards. Now he's exercis- Latin Biz Awaits ing his hard -won creative clout to take something of a mLsical left turn. Download Boom On Jan. 25, BNA Records will release "Be As You Are: Songs BY LEILA COBO From an Old Blue Chair," a Latin music fans who visit legal music download album that singerisongwriter stores may experience a sense of déjà vu.
    [Show full text]
  • Chris Skinner
    CHRIS SKINNER Christopher John Skinner 12 March 1953 – 21 February 2020 elected Fellow of the British Academy 2004 by RAY CHAMBERS IAN DIAMOND Fellow of the Academy TIM HOLT PAUL A. SMITH FIONA STEELE Fellow of the Academy Chris Skinner was probably, globally, the very best statistician of his generation work- ing on sample surveys, and someone who made an enormous contribution to social statistics in a number of research areas. In addition, as an academic leader he had an enormous impact on research methodology across the social sciences and in official statistics, and on training future generations of social scientists in methodology. Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy, XIX, 377–393 Posted 2 October 2020. © British Academy 2020. CHRIS SKINNER Chris Skinner was born in Penge, South London, on 12 March 1953, the elder son of Richard and Daphne Skinner. His father worked for Lloyds of London, and his mother worked at the family-run furniture store, Edginton’s, in Penge. He showed an early aptitude for mathematics at St Dunstan’s College, Catford, which had an inno- vative mathematics curriculum, led by Geoffrey Matthews who went on to be the first professor of mathematics education at a British university. The curriculum involved subjects such as sets, logic, matrices, statistics and computing—a far cry from the standard pure and applied mathematics taught in the great majority of schools—and was taught using innovative learning materials. These excited Chris and, while he had other areas of expertise, he was only ever going to study mathematics at university.
    [Show full text]
  • Quality Work Within Statistics
    ▲ EDITION 1999 Quality Work and Quality Assurance within Statistics EUROPEAN THEME 0 COMMISSION 0Miscellaneous 2 FOREWORD Statistics & quality go hand-in-hand Quality of statistics was the theme of the annual conference of presidents and directors-general of the national sta- tistical institutes (NSIs) of EU and EEA countries, organised in Stockholm on 28-29 May 1998 by Statistics Sweden in collaboration with Eurostat. Quality has always been one of the obvious requirements of statistics, although the notion of 'quality' has changed over the years. Nowadays a statistical 'product' has to exhibit reliability, relevance of concept, promptness, ease of access, clarity, comparability, consistency and exhaustiveness. While all these features form part of the whole prod- uct, individual users will attach more or less importance to each one. When statistics - gross domestic product or inflation, for example - have a financial impact, accuracy and comparability are vital. But if the same data are being used by someone interested in short-term trends, then the speed with which they are made available is the key feature. It is for users to decide. They are the people who determine quality criteria. Statisticians are no longer 'number freaks' in a world of their own, but have become managers of statistics, in constant touch with those who make decisions. Such a transformation is possible only if the whole production process is ready for change, because, as a rule, sci- entists such as statisticians tend not to pay much attention to the needs of people outside their own world. Scientists prefer to talk to other scientists. Now that the need for change is understood, how to bring it about? This question is being addressed by most of those in charge of national statistical institutes.
    [Show full text]