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The remit of Sub-group 5. An ultimate purpose of NONIE is to ensure a more substantial program of
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1. Working Together on Impact Evaluation NONIE Subgroup 5
DFID, FAO, UNDP,WHO
The Hague, 25 May 2007
2. The remit of Sub-group 5 An ultimate purpose of NONIE is to ensure a more substantial program of “impact evaluations” is carried out in the future, preferably in a coordinated or joint manner.
This subgroup will make proposals for both the means by which this program should be undertaken and the content of the program (or at least means for identifying content).
3. Group plan of work – so far Take stock (again!): list of evaluation studies for four agencies
Identify elements for joint working
Propose scenarios
4. Group plan of work – next steps Build upon work of other NONIE sub-groups on definition, approaches and methods
Identify priorities of work
Trigger joint initiatives
5. Key considerations in IE Methodology: wide range of opinions
Demand and Supply for IE: who, what, where
Constraints to collective action:
costs
“delivery over learning” attitude
6. Premises for working together on IE NONIE members have signed up to promote more rigorous impact evaluation.
Joint work will be possible only if we take an “eclectic” approach to IE, as recommended in the Paris meeting
Equally, agreement on a common definition of the boundaries of IE and some common standards is necessary.
Commitment from agencies senior management to push IE forward is required
7. Examples of Joint Working FAO-led multi-stakeholder impact assessment of locust damage in Sahel
DFID/IEG impact evaluations
Ghana, Primary Education
Bangladesh, Nutrition
India, Rural Poverty
OECD-DAC evaluation of General Budget Support
8. Lessons learnt As in any joint evaluation:
specify up-front objectives and expectations
share information with all stakeholders
ensure ownership by all to facilitate uptake and follow-up of recommendations
high transaction costs
Rigor in impact evaluation can be reached through different methods
9. Elements of Joint Working Administrative framework
Common standards
Shared knowledge
Capacity building
Financing arrangements
10. Three Scenarios
“Low Case”
“Medium Case”
“High Case”
11. (1) Administrative Framework Low Case
No secretariat
Subset of NONIE members work on specific studies
Medium Case
Light secretariat which facilitates information sharing and organizes regular meetings to compare notes and push for common standards
Work plans not coordinated
High Case
Full secretariat with dedicated staff, up-to-date website, Help Desk
Work plans coordinated between NONIE members…and
Opportunities for complementary working with 3IE are exploited
12. (2) Common Standards Low Case
No standards endorsed by all NONIE members
Medium Case
Agreement between NONIE members on minimum criteria for impact evaluation
Some cross-NONIE peer review to help embed standards
High Case
Determined attempt to “push the envelope” on methods
Each study subject to quality assurance by another NONIE partner or independent expert
13. (3) Knowledge Sharing Low-Case
Sporadic, opportunistic dissemination of approaches, lessons learned
Medium-Case
Conferences and seminars at regular intervals to share ideas on approaches across NONIE; open to non-NONIE parties (e.g. 3IE)
High-Case
A NONIE website with links to a common database of studies that is regularly updated, with “gate keeping” to ensure that only studies meeting minimum criteria are included
Links to other websites and events on impact evaluation
14. (4) Capacity Building Low-Case
Some (mainly “on-the-job”) training of consultants involved in studies
Medium-Case
Systematic attempts to train individuals in impact evaluation design, targeted at (a) staff in NONIE agencies and (b) counterparts in partner countries
High-Case
In addition to systematic training, long-term investment in partner country institutions (e.g. policy research institutes) to enhance use of IE and to advocate for it
15. (5) Financing Arrangements Low-Case
Limited to a sub-set of NONIE members financing an agreed set of studies
Medium-Case
Ad hoc arrangements for specific NONIE-wide initiatives
No common fund to finance programme costs
Admin. cost of “light secretariat” absorbed by host agency
High-Case
NONIE members put money into a common fund which covers both administrative and programme costs
Coordinate with 3IE to finance a series of IEs in complementary areas
Possibly…competitive bidding for programme funds
16. How far dare we aim and by when?
17. A Framework to Aim For A framework that supports a continuing debate about what constitutes methodological rigour
A framework that produces rigorous studies that are owned by the agencies that sponsor them and the development partners that are involved
A framework that builds capacity for conducting and using impact evaluations.