Combining multiple datasets to understand gender based violence in public spaces in Mexico
In Mexico, more than half of the homicides of women in 2019 (52 per cent) occurred in public spaces. High rates of femicide have drawn increased international attention. In the face of this growing problem and public pressure, the Government of Mexico City declared a public alert about GBV in November 2019. Following the alert, it worked to increase the safety of public spaces in the city by introducing safer public pathways and panic buttons to encourage reporting of incidents. The impact of these different interventions on rates of violence in the city is still unclear and policy makers have been keen to understand where they have proved most successful.
What does the Accelerator Lab plan to do?
In collaboration with GIZ Data Lab and GIZ Mexico, the Lab is combining open data about urban infrastructure (such as public transport) with closed government datasets about the use of new panic buttons. They hope this will lead to a better understanding of the urban characteristics associated with GBV in public spaces across Mexico City. They will also work with datasets that tap into residents’ perceptions of urban safety, such as sentiment analysis of social media and crowdmapping with local women’s groups. By mobilizing these different sources of intelligence, they will test whether collective intelligence can help them to identify the urban spaces where women are safest (using a method known as data driven positive deviance). Cross-correlating their findings with the known locations of the government’s safer pathways will also help the government to evaluate which policy measures have been most successful, in order to guide future interventions.
- Mexico
- Latin America and the Caribbean
- Public Sector Transformation
Case study
03/03/2025
- Inclusion
- Gender equality and women’s empowerment
- Rural/urban inclusion
- Innovation
- Digital transformation
- User-centric design
