Open Data Lebanon

Open Data Lebanon

A citizen initiative

الرئيسيةالبياناتحول
إرسال بيانات
Open Data Lebanon

Lebanon's Open Data Platform is a citizen initiative by Dr. Wissam Sammouri, aiming to make public data and information accessible, searchable, and available for all.

منصة البيانات المفتوحة للبنان

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56 datasets

Central Administration of Statistics

CAS

Excel

Vital Data 1999-2025: Births, Deaths, Marriages, Divorces

This dataset contains both monthly and yearly vital statistics from 1999 to 2025. This dataset is aggregated by location (Beirut, Mount-Lebanon, North, South, etc.), gender (male, female), Type (births, deaths, marriages, divorces).

LebanonJan 2026
UCDP

UCDP

CSV

UCDP Conflict Data for Lebanon

This dataset provides event-level data on conflict incidents in Lebanon, including dates, locations, actors, and fatalities, compiled from the Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP). The data supports analysis of conflict trends, humanitarian planning, and research on security dynamics in Lebanon.

LebanonJan 2026
Unicef

Unicef

PDF

UNICEF Lebanon Annual Report 2024

This annual report presents an overview of UNICEF’s programmes and results in Lebanon during 2024. It summarizes the humanitarian and development context affecting children, including the escalation of conflict, internal displacement, economic decline, and pressures on public services. The report highlights UNICEF’s key achievements across health, nutrition, education, child protection, water and sanitation, youth engagement, and social protection, as well as emergency preparedness and response activities. It also outlines partnerships, operational challenges, lessons learned, and priorities for future action to support the rights and well-being of children and vulnerable populations in Lebanon.

LebanonJan 2026
IOF

IOF

PDF

Review of the Government Spending on Social Protection in Lebanon

This publication presents the findings of the Review of Government Spending on Social Protection in Lebanon (2017–2024), led by the Institut des Finances Basil Fuleihan. The review analyzes government allocations and actual spending on social protection over the period 2017–2024, examining trends in financing, budget execution, and expenditure distribution across social protection pillars, beneficiary groups, and lifecycle risks. It highlights the significant decline in the real value of social protection spending due to currency depreciation, the concentration of resources in social insurance and public sector pensions, and persistent challenges related to efficiency, equity, and coverage. The report aims to inform fiscal and social policy reforms and support evidence-based decision-making for the implementation of Lebanon’s National Social Protection Strategy. The review was conducted with technical support from the International Labour Organization (ILO) and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), and co-funded by the European Union.

LebanonJan 2026
Unicef

Unicef

PDF

Facts and Findings of the Review of Government Spending on Social Protection in Lebanon (2017–2024)

This brief presents the key findings of the Review of Government Spending on Social Protection (2017–2024), conducted by the Institut des Finances Basil Fuleihan with technical support from the ILO and UNICEF. It examines trends in social protection financing in Lebanon, highlighting the sharp erosion of real spending due to currency depreciation, the concentration of resources in public sector pensions, declining budget execution efficiency, and gaps in coverage and equity. The brief also outlines priority policy recommendations to strengthen data systems, institutional capacity, fiscal space, and the long-term sustainability and inclusiveness of Lebanon’s social protection system.

LebanonJan 2026
WF

WFP

PDF

WFP Lebanon Situation Report - November 2025

This report offers a concise, evidence-based overview of Lebanon’s deepening food security crisis, showing how conflict aftershocks, displacement, and funding shortfalls are affecting millions, and how WFP is responding on the ground to meet urgent needs despite severe resource constraints.

LebanonDec 2025
IF

integrated-food-security-phase-classification

PDF

IPC ACUTE FOOD INSECURITY ANALYSIS

According to the latest projection update, around 1.26 million people (23 percent of the analyzed population) are expected to face high levels of acute food insecurity (IPC Phase 3 or above) between April and September 2024. This includes 85,000 people (2 percent of the analyzed population) in IPC Phase 4 (Emergency) and 1.18 million people (21 percent of the analyzed population) in IPC Phase 3 (Crisis). The analyzed population includes Lebanese, Syrian refugees, Palestine Refugees in Lebanon (PRL) and Palestine Refugees from Syria (PRS). Among the 1.26 million people expected to be in IPC Phase 3 or above between April and September 2024, 683,000 are Lebanese residents (18 percent of the resident population), 510,000 are Syrian refugees (34 percent of the Syrians refugees in Lebanon), 55,000 are PRL (31 percent of the PRL population in Lebanon), and 13,600 are PRS (45 percent of the PRS population in Lebanon). Populations classified in IPC Phase 3 or above require urgent humanitarian action to reduce food gaps, protect and restore livelihoods and prevent acute malnutrition.

LebanonMay 2024
CF

center-for-lebanese-studies

PDF

The Impact of Lebanon’s Compounded Crises on Grade 12 Students’ Readiness for Official Examinations in 2024

By Mohammad Hammoud, Maha Shuayb Amid the ongoing economic and social crisis in Lebanon, which continues to cast a shadow over the education sector alongside the Israeli aggression on southern Lebanon, Baalbek, and Bekaa, the question of whether Lebanese students are ready to take this year’s (2024) official exams is raised again. According to a recent field study we conducted on the loss of learning among tenth- grade students in public schools, a significant educational loss was revealed in mathematics, Arabic, and English subjects, primarily due to the loss of approximately 700 school days over the past six academic years due to the successive crises Lebanon has faced. As part of the education observatory that was launched by the Centre for Lebanese Studies in 2020 to study the impact of the economic crisis on the education sector, we conducted an online survey in May 2024 to examine the readiness of high school (grade 12) students for this year’s official exams after experiencing various types of crises and disruptions from educational interruptions to the accumulation of learning difficulties and educational losses to the ongoing Israeli aggression on southern Lebanon and Baalbek. The survey included a sample of 406 high school students (48% in private schools and 52% in public schools), distributed across the eight Lebanese governorates.

LebanonMay 2024
UN

UNHCR

PDF

LEBANON - NEEDS AT A GLANCE - 2024

Lebanon remains a country hosting the largest number of refugees per capita and per square kilometer in the world, with the Government's estimation of 1.5 million Syrian refugees and some 11,238 refugees of other nationalities.

LebanonMar 2024
BI

bou-hamad-imad

Excel

Personality traits and high cigarette dependence among university students: Insights from Lebanon

The survey was distributed by e-mail to undergraduates and graduate students registered at AUB and LU. Data was collected from February 25 to March 31, 2022. The participants were provided with the objectives, details, and written informed consent form of this study through an e-mail recruitment text and on the first page of the survey. They were asked to sign the online consent form before starting the survey. Moreover, participants did not receive any financial incentives, and all data collected was anonymized to safeguard confidentiality and ensure data reliability. To avoid double sampling, we employed specific strategies for AUB and LU students. The study's variables fall into three distinct clusters: personality traits based on the Big Five model, sociodemographic and lifestyle factors, and the variable measuring smoking dependence.

LebanonJan 2024
I

idmc

CSV

Lebanon - Internal Displacements Updates (IDU) (event data)

Recent data on population movements due to conflict and disasters in Lebanon, covering the past 180 days, is available from the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC). This data focuses on internally displaced persons (IDPs), defined by the 1998 Guiding Principles as individuals or groups who are forced to flee their homes due to armed conflict, violence, human rights violations, or natural and man-made disasters, without crossing international borders. The IDMC collects preliminary estimates of internal displacement through its Event Data, based on daily updates from various sources. These updates provide early assessments of new displacements as they occur. While these estimates are continuously revised, the validated and final figures are available through the Global Internal Displacement Database (GIDD).

LebanonDec 2023
GI

Gherbal Initiative

Web App

Prisoners' Statistics إحصاءات السجناء

.صفحة بيانات تفاعليّة عن عدد السجناء وتقسيمهم حسب السجون والسنوات وابرز الجرائم A visual representation of the number of prisoners broken by prisons, years and top felonies.

LebanonSep 2022
GI

Gherbal Initiative

Web App

Loans and Grants القروض والمنح

قائمة كاملة عن القروض والمنح بين عامي 1990 و2020 A full list of loans and grants received between 1990 and 2020.

LebanonSep 2022
GI

Gherbal Initiative

Web App

Proprieties of Non-Lebanese أملاك الأجانب

.خريطة تفاعلية توضح التطور الزمني للملكيّة الأجنبيّة للأراضي اللبنانية في كل قضاء A map based portal for Non-Lebanese proprieties of lands over time by caza.

LebanonSep 2022
United Nations Development Programme

UNDP

PDF

Gender-Related Laws, Policies and Practices in Lebanon

More than a decade after the United Nations’ adoption of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, which is adopted by many countries including Lebanon, these countries returned in 2015 to commit themselves to achieve gender equality and to empower all women and girls as one of the development agenda goals for the coming years1. According to this goal, gender equality is no longer a fundamental human right only, but also one of the necessary foundations for peace, prosperity and sustainability at the social and economic level. Despite the various efforts made in Lebanon to achieve gender-based justice and equality, the picture is still bleak. In 2017, Lebanon ranked 137th out of 144 countries in the world and 11th among 14 Arab countries on the global gender gap index of the World Economic Foru2m. This index and others require an auditing analysis in a political, economic, cultural, social and security factors that Lebanon is undergoing. Therefore, this report will show a rebuttal of some of the most significant aspects of gender justice and equality in Lebanon, then study it by analysing the collection of legislation and policies and the based-on practices at the level of the state and other actors.

LebanonMar 2022
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