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Multiple Regional Voices: Preamble. Leading into the Evaluation Conclave, the Community of Evaluators organized regional meetings in Kathmandu, Mumbai, Chennai,
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1. Multiple Voices, Multiple Perspectives from the Region: Building a Road Map for Change Chelladurai Solomon, India
Sonal Zaveri, India
Bhabatosh Nath, Bangladesh
Ramesh Tuladhar, Nepal
2. Multiple Regional Voices: Preamble Leading into the Evaluation Conclave, the Community of Evaluators organized regional meetings in Kathmandu, Mumbai, Chennai, & Dhaka.
Brought together about 200 evaluators, funders, policy makers, and development implementers. Together, we explored challenges, gaps, and opportunities in making evaluation matter in dev.
Used these events to reach out to, & connect evaluators, evaluation commissioners, and evaluants at the national, state and grassroots level.
Some of the key insights & debates voiced are presented here
Chelladurai Solomon, Sonal Zaveri, Ramesh Tuladhar & Bhabatosh Nath lead the presentations
3. Multiple Regional Voices: Key Evaluation Gaps
Whose evaluation and who evaluates whom?
How inclusive is it?
How is it conducted?
Who uses the evaluation findings?
4. Whose evaluation and who evaluates whom?
Dhaka, Bangladesh
Largely the funders initiate evaluation to check the efficiency, effectiveness & lessons learnt
Need to drive for collective ownership over the evaluation
5. Whose evaluation and who evaluates whom?
Chennai, India
The evaluants are brought in subsequently to the decision of the funders
Expect the evaluants to learn from the evaluation process.
Crucial to collectively set the objectives, scope, methodology, tone & when?
6. Whose evaluation and who evaluates whom?
Kathmandu, Nepal
There is multiple evaluation perceptions
No evaluation policies and standards
Build bridges; need coordination among the major stakeholders
7. Whose evaluation and who evaluates whom?
Mumbai, India
Can the gap between “the sponsor/funder” and “the doer” ever be bridged?
Implementers are accountable to funders, & to people they work with.
Can we make evaluation be a two way process?
8. Posers for CoE & Seeking Partnership
Whose evaluation and who evaluates whom?
Regional Voices
Be instrumental in nurturing ‘collective ownership over the evaluation’ by the major stakeholders (beneficiaries, govt, implementer, funder, evaluator)
9. How inclusive is it?
Dhaka, Bangladesh
Not all the major stakeholders (beneficiaries, implementers, donors & evaluators), are included in selecting evaluators.
Set a procedure where the major stakeholders involve equally in the selection
10. How inclusive is it?
Chennai, India Evaluation scope & its implementation hardly checks on the root causes, grassroots complexities & the problem relevance
Build road map for bottom-up approach: relevance, knowledge, methods, perceiving achievements or gaps, use
11. How inclusive is it?
Kathmandu, Nepal
Insufficient attention to the barriers (traditional divisions, gender) and opportunities (community participation, village structures)
Be sensitive to grassroots group compositions and their involvement
12. How inclusive is it?
Mumbai, India
Major stakeholders (community/groups/ intermediaries) are hardly involved in planning & finalization of evaluation
Kept evaluation and evaluators separated from the programs
Integrate programs & evaluation measures from the program planning; inbuilt eval system & evaluator
13. Posers for CoE & Seeking Partnership
How inclusive is it?
Regional Voices
Derive & disseminate measures for bottom-up approach where the major stakeholders are on board.
14. How is it conducted?
Dhaka, Bangladesh The methodology as well, is decided by funders themselves along with evaluation managers / evaluators.
There is compromise on the rigor of the methodology & data collection.
Gender is mainly limited to number (desegregation only).
Enhance the participation of the beneficiaries & go beyond numbers (gender & beneficiaries).
15. How is it conducted
Chennai, India
Professional exercise, the history is ignored; business-like, often the human became a number.
Evaluation tools hardly open up the minds of the beneficiaries & intermediaries for learning
Validity question in the sources of data; social evidence based cases or sec data from govt sources
Have structured set of impact indicators, generated by the program & beneficiaries
16. How is it conducted?
Kathmandu, Nepal
Capacity building on Evaluation is not a priority area of govt & funders
Securing financial resources for evaluation is problem
Do capacity enhancement of evaluators & building evaluation organizations
17. How is it conducted?
Mumbai, India
Evaluators have inadequate knowledge of the people & organization to be evaluated
Take into account the value & social system of grant makers, evaluants & people
Have clear ToR that spell out the purpose, methods, dissemination & use
18. Posers for CoE & Seeking Partnership
How is it conducted?
Regional Voices
Enhance capacity in evaluation; understanding, skill, methods &networking
Include all the major stakeholders in the CB interventions.
19. Who uses the evaluation findings?
Dhaka, Bangladesh Findings have limited dissemination. Agencies are unwilling to share evaluation report.
Evaluation results be shared with the major stakeholders & be followed up for use with sensitivity
20. Who uses the evaluation findings?
Chennai, India
Evaluations are used / misused selectively for correction & continuity
Set system to check the use of the evaluation findings appropriately
21. Who uses the evaluation findings?
Kathmandu, Nepal
Lack of evaluation use for learning and policy making
Affirm benefits of evaluation use for transparency, accountability, better development results & good governance
22. Who uses the evaluation findings?
Mumbai, India
How are funders accountable both to the organization & people?
Assess possibilities of wider dissemination / larger replicability
23. Posers for CoE & Seeking Partnership
Who uses the evaluation findings?
Regional Voices
Inculcate culture for citizen’s voice in dev programs (govt and others) & evaluation use
24. Thank you
Multiple Voices, Multiple Perspectives from the Region: Building a Road Map for Change
Seeking Partnership and solidarity
CoE Members