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http://www.dilbert.com/. Impact pathways – a more complete picture …. Logic models. Network models. How change happens.
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Impact pathways – a more complete picture ….. Logic models Network models
How change happens • “Improvements in poverty alleviation, food security and the state of natural resources result from dynamic, interactive, non-linear, and generally uncertain processes of innovation.” EIARD, 2003
How change happens Orlikowski and Hofman, 1997
What is a network? • A network is a collection of people and / or things that are connected to each other by some kind of relationship. • Many kinds of entities can be part of a network: people, projects, organisations, documents, events, cities, countries, etc. • And there are many kinds of relationships that can link such entities, involving transmission or exchange of information, money, goods, affection, influence, infection, etc.
Advantages of network models • Actor-oriented descriptions: • observable, understandable, verifiable • Captures real-life complexity: • We are subject to multiple influences • We influence many others • And influence works both ways • Multi-disciplinary experience with analysis of networks • Sociology, political science, psychology, biology, physics, information technologies…
A network diagram (organisations linked by a project) Influence pathway: actor + relationship + actor + relationship…
A network matrix (existence and type of link, and summary rows and columns)
Today’s tasks….. • Identify relevant actors & relationships • Develop network diagrams for • Your project now • Residual network 2 years after project has finished • Identify key extension and political support linkages • Discuss implications
1. Identify actors & relationships important for your project now • Actor types identified in other workshops: • International NGO; national NGO; local NGO • Community-based organization (CBO); • Farmers’ group; • University; • National agricultural research organization (NARO); • National agricultural extension organization; • Advanced Research Institute (ARI); • Network organization; • Other Govnt. Agency • CG Centre • Private Sector • Religious organizations • Local Govnt. Organizations • Media • CPWF (theme leader, basin coordinator, managing centre) • Federations and associations • Unregistered advocacy groups • Donor
Identify the actors (Org’s and groups) that your project works with • Avoid overlapping categories • Split them • Actors should have relatively specific geographic location • “Farmer groups in pilot sites in Isabela Province”, rather than “farmer groups in Northern Luzon”
Administration/ Coor Provision of funding Provision of information Provision of pilot sites Provision of seed Provision of inputs (specify) Research (generally bi-directional) Training / capacity building Outreach of project outputs (scaling out) Provision of / Lobbying for political support (scaling up) Relationship Types
2. Develop network diagram • Actors: • Use shape, size & colour and labels to describe who is involved • Relationships • Use thickness & colour to describe kinds • Use arrows to describe direction • Don’tuse distance/length
Also construct a network matrix (relationship is of row to column actor)