The Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study aims to answer these and many other questions related to health, disease, and mortality. They provide estimates across hundreds of indicators for every country in the world over the last decades.
One of the largest efforts of its kind, the GBD study is published by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washington.
I recently updated more than 500 of our charts with the latest release of the GBD study.
Many of our charts, like the one below, show data grouped by world regions — such as “East Asia and Pacific” and “Europe and Central Asia”.
But different data providers that we rely on, such as the World Bank and World Health Organization (WHO), use different regions, or define regions with the same name in different ways.
We have a page that defines these world regions, but I recently made it even easier to discover these definitions directly in our interactive charts.
Look for the small “i” info icon next to the name of a world region, like you see in the chart here showing data from the World Bank.
If you hover the info icon, you’ll see a short description and interactive world map showing which countries belong to each region.
Hannah Ritchie, our Deputy Editor and Science Outreach Lead, was recently named as one of six authors shortlisted for the 2026 Unwin Award.
The award recognizes “non-fiction writers in the earlier stages of their careers as authors, whose work is considered to have made a significant contribution to the world.”
It’s awarded for an author’s overall body of work. Hannah has written two books:
“Clearing the Air: A Hopeful Guide to Solving Climate Change in 50 Questions and Answers”, which was recently released in the US and Canada and is available in many other countries.
And 2024’s “Not the End of the World: Surprising facts, dangerous myths and hopeful solutions for our future on planet Earth”.
The winner will be announced in April. Congratulatons, Hannah!
Which countries have the highest incarceration rates and largest prison populations? How has this changed over the last decades?
To answer these questions, the Institute for Crime & Justice Policy Research at the University of London publishes the World Prison Brief.
It’s an online database providing free access to information on prison systems around the world and supporting evidence-based development of prison policy and practice globally.
I recently updated our charts with the February 2026 release of the World Prison Brief.
Tourism can be important for both the travelers and the people in the countries they visit.
For visitors, traveling can increase their understanding of and appreciation for people in other countries and their cultures. And in many countries, many people rely on tourism for their income. In some, it is one of the largest industries.
But tourism also has externalities: it contributes to global carbon emissions and can encroach on local environments and cultures.
To help you understand the scale of tourism and some of its impacts, I recently updated more than 20 of our interactive charts with the latest data from the UN Tourism Statistics Database.
Electricity is one major part of how we use energy, alongside transport and heating.
From which sources are countries getting their electricity? Are countries moving away from fossil fuels and toward low-carbon sources like renewables and nuclear?
To help you track this, I recently updated our charts with the 2026 European Electricity Review from Ember, an energy think tank. With this update, our charts now include 2025 data for European countries, including Turkey.
We expect Ember’s Global Electricity Review for 2026 to be released later this spring.
How are countries around the world developing — in terms of their economies, infrastructure, technology, energy use, healthcare, education, food production, and much more?
This is the World Bank’s primary collection of development indicators, which it sources from officially recognized international sources, such as the UN, OECD, and IMF.
I recently updated our charts — over 400 of them — with the latest WDI release.
Hannah Richie, our Deputy Editor and Science Outreach Lead, published her first book, Not the End of the World, in 2024. It tackled seven of the world’s big environmental problems — climate change was just one of them.
Since that book came out, Hannah realized that people had a lot more questions about how we tackle climate change than she covered in that one chapter.
This led her to write her new book, Clearing the Air. It’s all about how we tackle climate change: covering everything from renewable energy and nuclear power to electric vehicles, heat pumps, minerals, carbon capture, and geoengineering.
Foreign aid refers to one country providing money, goods, or services to another, usually to support the people in a lower-income country.
It can be used to build public infrastructure, improve health or education, increase economic growth, reduce conflict, support institutions, or recover from disasters or crises.
Which countries receive the most foreign aid? Which ones give the most? And how has this changed over the last decades?
The main dataset that helps us answer these questions is from the OECD. The technical term that the OECD and others use for foreign aid is "Official Development Assistance" (ODA).
I’ve just updated our charts with their latest release, which now goes through 2024.
The experience of poverty goes far beyond having no or low income. It often includes things like not having enough of the right foods to eat, not being able to attend school, and not having access to clean drinking water or electricity.
This group of indicators measures poverty across essential areas of health, education, and living standards. You can read more about the MPI in our article.
I’ve updated our charts with the latest release of the MPI, allowing you to track where households face overlapping deprivations and how this has changed over time.