Statistics of certificates issued for the year 2023
** percent of IT professionals worldwide hold at least one certification according to respondents in 2019. Interestingly enough, North America is below the global average with only ** percent of respondents answering as such.
IT certifications are influential in hiring decisions
An IT certification is an honorific document demonstrating a professional’s competency in a certain aspect of technology. IT certifications help to boost the credibility and marketability of related IT skills. More than ** percent of U.S. companies that place high value in the understanding and utilization of technology consider IT certifications to be very valuable in their hiring process. On a global scale, the ratio of certified to non-certified IT professionals are highest in Asia-Pacific and Latin America, with certified IT professionals in these regions constituting more than ** percent of the IT workforce.
Unequal representation of female workers in tech
Although IT industry employees are in high demand, diversity within the industry is surprisingly low as most employees in tech companies worldwide are male. Women account for less than ten percent of software developers worldwide and only a quarter of all employees in computer and mathematical occupations in the United States.
This report presents the latest statistics on type and volume of tribunal cases received, disposed of and outstanding and the number of Gender Recognition Certificates applied for and granted in July to September 2018. Additionally this report includes annual statistics for the Special Educational Needs and Disability (SEND) Tribunal for the academic year 2017/18 ; as well as two statistical notices covering Detained Immigration Appeals and Immigration and Asylum bail applications and appeals.
This table contains 3226 series, with data for years 1992 - 2008 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years). This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (11 items: Canada; Prince Edward Island; Nova Scotia; Newfoundland and Labrador ...), Program level (11 items: Total; program level; Trade/vocational and preparatory training certificate or diploma; Community college certificate or diploma and other community college level; Undergraduate level ...), Classification of Instructional Programs, Primary Grouping (CIP_PG) (14 items: Total; instructional programs; Personal improvement and leisure; Visual and performing arts; and communications technologies; Education ...), Sex (3 items: Both sexes; Females; Males ...).
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Number of Certificate: New: Total data was reported at 5,290.000 Unit in 2017. This records an increase from the previous number of 4,645.000 Unit for 2016. Number of Certificate: New: Total data is updated yearly, averaging 4,065.000 Unit from Dec 2005 (Median) to 2017, with 13 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 5,490.000 Unit in 2013 and a record low of 596.000 Unit in 2005. Number of Certificate: New: Total data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Directorate General of Resources and Equipment of Post and Information Technology. The data is categorized under Indonesia Premium Database’s Transport and Telecommunication Sector – Table ID.TE008: Telecommunication Statistics: Certificate of Tools and Equipment.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Number of Certificate: Revision: Japan data was reported at 1.000 Unit in 2017. This records a decrease from the previous number of 7.000 Unit for 2016. Number of Certificate: Revision: Japan data is updated yearly, averaging 7.500 Unit from Dec 2009 (Median) to 2017, with 8 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 15.000 Unit in 2013 and a record low of 1.000 Unit in 2017. Number of Certificate: Revision: Japan data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Directorate General of Resources and Equipment of Post and Information Technology. The data is categorized under Indonesia Premium Database’s Transport and Telecommunication Sector – Table ID.TE009: Telecommunication Statistics: Certificate of Tools and Equipment: by Country.
Increase the number of degrees and certificates obtained from 40,484 in 2014 to 47,284 by 2018.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Summary statistics on Gender Recognition Certificates applied for and granted by Her Majesty’s Courts and Tribunals Service’s Gender Recognition Panel. Under UK law, individuals are considered by the State to be of the gender – either male or female – that is recorded on their birth certificate. The Gender Recognition Act 2004, which came into effect on 4 April 2005, enables transsexual people to apply to the Gender Recognition Panel (GRP) to receive a Gender Recognition Certificate (GRC).
Source agency: Justice
Designation: Official Statistics not designated as National Statistics
Language: English
Alternative title: Gender Recognition Certificate Statistics
This report presents the latest statistics on type and volume of tribunal cases received, disposed of and outstanding and the number of gender recognition certificates applied for and granted in October to December 2016. Annex C covers management information on employment tribunal receipts.
Additionally, 2 statistical notices have been published below giving further breakdown of SSCS and Immigration and Asylum FTTIAC tribunals.
These quarterly bulletins are released by the Ministry of Justice and produced in accordance with arrangements approved by the UK Statistics Authority.
This quarterly bulletin presents the latest statistics on Gender Recognition Certificates applied for and granted by Her Majesty’s Courts and Tribunals Service’s (HMCTS) Gender Recognition Panel during the quarter January to March 2014, along with quarterly data since April 2009.
The Gender Recognition Panel was established by the Gender Recognition Act 2004, which enables transsexual people to change their legal gender and gain the rights and responsibilities of their acquired gender. All applications are determined by the Panel and successful applicants receive a Gender Recognition Certificate.
There are two application processes for obtaining a Gender Recognition Certificate:
The number of applications for Gender Recognition Certificates received in the period January to March 2014 was 77, in line with the average quarterly figure.
Between January and March 2014, 75 applications were dealt with, an increase of 34% compared to this period last year, and just 3% less than the number dealt with during the previous quarter.
A full Gender Recognition Certificate was issued in 89% of cases dealt with; of these 70% were issued to individuals who were registered male at birth, while 30% were issued to individuals who were registered female at birth. The proportion of certificates granted to people registered female at birth has generally risen over the last 2 years.
Of the 173 interim Gender Recognition Certificates granted between 1 April 2005 and 31 March 2014, to date 67% have been converted to a full certificate. For those people that convert interim certificates to full certificates, the majority (59%) of people convert within 30 weeks.
The bulletin is produced and handled by the ministry’s analytical professionals and production staff.
In addition to Ministry of Justice professional and production staff, pre-release access to the quarterly statistics of up to 24 hours is granted to the following postholders:
Ministry of Justice: Secretary of State, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Permanent Secretary, Chief Executive of HMCTS, Director of Civil, Family and Tribunals, Director General of Finance and Corporate Services, Director of Analytical Services, Chief Statistician, Head of Special and Cross Cutting Tribunals, Deputy Director for Tribunals, Policy Advisers for Gender Recognition & Human Rights, Press Officers and Relevant Special Advisers.
We include a description of the data sets in the meta-data as well as sample code and results from a simulated data set. This dataset is not publicly accessible because: EPA cannot release personally identifiable information regarding living individuals, according to the Privacy Act and the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). This dataset contains information about human research subjects. Because there is potential to identify individual participants and disclose personal information, either alone or in combination with other datasets, individual level data are not appropriate to post for public access. Restricted access may be granted to authorized persons by contacting the party listed. It can be accessed through the following means: The R code is available on line here: https://github.com/warrenjl/SpGPCW. Format: Abstract The data used in the application section of the manuscript consist of geocoded birth records from the North Carolina State Center for Health Statistics, 2005-2008. In the simulation study section of the manuscript, we simulate synthetic data that closely match some of the key features of the birth certificate data while maintaining confidentiality of any actual pregnant women. Availability Due to the highly sensitive and identifying information contained in the birth certificate data (including latitude/longitude and address of residence at delivery), we are unable to make the data from the application section publicly available. However, we will make one of the simulated datasets available for any reader interested in applying the method to realistic simulated birth records data. This will also allow the user to become familiar with the required inputs of the model, how the data should be structured, and what type of output is obtained. While we cannot provide the application data here, access to the North Carolina birth records can be requested through the North Carolina State Center for Health Statistics and requires an appropriate data use agreement. Description Permissions: These are simulated data without any identifying information or informative birth-level covariates. We also standardize the pollution exposures on each week by subtracting off the median exposure amount on a given week and dividing by the interquartile range (IQR) (as in the actual application to the true NC birth records data). The dataset that we provide includes weekly average pregnancy exposures that have already been standardized in this way while the medians and IQRs are not given. This further protects identifiability of the spatial locations used in the analysis. File format: R workspace file. Metadata (including data dictionary) • y: Vector of binary responses (1: preterm birth, 0: control) • x: Matrix of covariates; one row for each simulated individual • z: Matrix of standardized pollution exposures • n: Number of simulated individuals • m: Number of exposure time periods (e.g., weeks of pregnancy) • p: Number of columns in the covariate design matrix • alpha_true: Vector of “true” critical window locations/magnitudes (i.e., the ground truth that we want to estimate). This dataset is associated with the following publication: Warren, J., W. Kong, T. Luben, and H. Chang. Critical Window Variable Selection: Estimating the Impact of Air Pollution on Very Preterm Birth. Biostatistics. Oxford University Press, OXFORD, UK, 1-30, (2019).
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This dataset presents the total number of certificates issued by year and certificate type. It includes various certificate categories such as GCC certificates, Arab certificates of origin, and free zone certificates. The data is structured by year and certificate type, allowing insights into trends in certificate issuance over time.
This helps to understand trade certification patterns and the dynamics of economic activities involving small and medium-sized enterprises.
Qatar Chamber issues five primary types of certificates of origin:
General Certificate (used for exports to countries with no preferential or customs agreements)
GCC Certificate (for exports to Gulf Cooperation Council countries, including local content details)
Arab Certificate (aligned with the trade facilitation agreement among Arab countries)
Preferential Certificate (for exports to countries with free trade agreements with Qatar)
Bilateral Agreement Certificate (issued under specific agreements with individual countries)
It’s important to note that these figures represent a subset of Qatar’s total exports—specifically those requiring a certificate of origin. In contrast, the National Statistics Center publishes comprehensive export data based on customs declarations from the General Authority of Customs. That data reflects all national exports, including oil, gas, non-oil, and re-exports, and is classified using the Harmonized System (HS) Code, country, value, quantity, and type of export.
Therefore, while this dataset provides valuable insights into private sector export documentation and related economic trends, it complements rather than replaces the broader and more comprehensive national export statistics.
https://data.gov.tw/licensehttps://data.gov.tw/license
The Ministry of Economic Affairs Intellectual Property Office provides three types of patent announcement and certification statistics for both domestic and foreign individuals for reference.
https://data.gov.tw/licensehttps://data.gov.tw/license
Provide statistics on the issuance of police criminal record certificates by police agencies nationwide (by agency, year, and total).
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
## Overview
Certificate Data Extraction is a dataset for object detection tasks - it contains Words annotations for 232 images.
## Getting Started
You can download this dataset for use within your own projects, or fork it into a workspace on Roboflow to create your own model.
## License
This dataset is available under the [Public Domain license](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/Public Domain).
https://data.gov.tw/licensehttps://data.gov.tw/license
This table is extracted from the database of the Intellectual Property Office of the Ministry of Economic Affairs, and provides statistical data on patent applications, announcements, and certifications for reference by the public.
Statistics on the number of certificates and restrictions issued by civil servants
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Indonesia Number of Certificate: New: USA data was reported at 176.000 Unit in 2017. This records an increase from the previous number of 108.000 Unit for 2016. Indonesia Number of Certificate: New: USA data is updated yearly, averaging 220.500 Unit from Dec 2009 (Median) to 2017, with 8 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 419.000 Unit in 2009 and a record low of 108.000 Unit in 2016. Indonesia Number of Certificate: New: USA data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Directorate General of Resources and Equipment of Post and Information Technology. The data is categorized under Indonesia Premium Database’s Transport and Telecommunication Sector – Table ID.TE009: Telecommunication Statistics: Certificate of Tools and Equipment: by Country.
Statistics of preparing certificates and restrictions issued electronically by embassies
https://data.gov.tw/licensehttps://data.gov.tw/license
This table provides statistical data on three types of patent announcement and certification cases by nationality, provided by the Intellectual Property Office of the Ministry of Economic Affairs for reference.
Statistics of certificates issued for the year 2023