1 / 16

The Emergency Capacity Building (ECB) Project

A Guide to Measuring Change. The Emergency Capacity Building (ECB) Project. www.ecbproject.org. SUMMARY OF PRESENTATION. The Emergency Capacity Building (ECB) Project Partnership in Innovation The need for a Guide to measure the ‘Contribution to Change’ Using a Livelihoods Approach

teague
Télécharger la présentation

The Emergency Capacity Building (ECB) Project

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Guide to Measuring Change The Emergency Capacity Building (ECB) Project www.ecbproject.org

  2. SUMMARY OF PRESENTATION The Emergency Capacity Building (ECB) Project Partnership in Innovation The need for a Guide to measure the ‘Contribution to Change’ Using a Livelihoods Approach Measuring Change for Households The Methodology Field Testing Importance to the Sector

  3. Emergency Capacity Building (ECB) Project • Collaboration between 6 international NGOs 2008-2013 • Focused on 3 core themes: DRR, National staff capacity building, improving accountability to disaster affected communities & developing impact measurement best practice • 4 country and 1 regional consortia (Bangladesh, Bolivia, Indonesia, Niger and the Horn of Africa) with representatives in each country • Global Advisor Groups tackling shared challenges and programs for each core theme (DRR, Staff Capacity, Accountability & Impact Measurement) • Global Project team to support the structure– Director, Field Manager, Communications, M&E, Finance and Fundraising, Knowledge Management • Funding from Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, DfID, ECHO, OFDA

  4. Accountability & Impact Measurement (AIM) • Agreement on Key Elements of Accountability • Development Good Enough Guide to Impact Measurement & Accountability and supporting communications materials • Established an accountability standing team of deployable staff • Developing a new Guide to (just) Measuring Change • Piloted Joint Evaluations in four countries • Piloted Joint Needs Assessment (rapid first 72hours) in 3 countries (ACAPS partners) – training and data capture

  5. Partnership in Innovation • The ECB Project is partnering with the University of East Anglia to research, pilot and publish a new methodology and supporting tools in a Guide to measure the ‘contribution to change’ brought about by humanitarian interventions in rapid onset emergencies.

  6. The need for a Guide to measure the ‘contribution to change’ • Difficulties in measuring impact • Demand from donors and humanitarian NGOs/UN to demonstrate impact and improve the quality of emergency responses • Little guidance currently exists to assist agencies to measure impact quantitatively and qualitatively

  7. Using a livelihoods approach • The approach is based on the sustainable livelihoods framework used by DFID. This framework is a tool aimed at improving the understanding of livelihoods, particularly the livelihoods of the poor. • The framework serves mainly as a way of organising data and analysis to view development interventions, so it is being adapted to be relevant to humanitarian interventions.

  8. The Livelihood Tool

  9. The Methodology • Designed to be robust enough to collect credible evidence of the ‘contribution to change’ but simple enough for field staff to use. • Whilst it was first envisaged that two methodologies would be tested, after Bihar it was decided to concentrate on the the Retrospective method

  10. The Household Approach • Most humanitarian initiatives have impacts that are likely to be recognised by affected populations if they result in changes in daily activities and the livelihoods of households. • As livelihoods differ within communities, this project is studying the impacts at the household level to best determine how livelihoods have changed • The changes stemming from both humanitarian interventions and the coping strategies of affected communities will be analysed.

  11. Retrospective Methodology • Where no baseline has been established, this methodology will enable the collection of data to best measure changes for households. • The field work will take place 12-15 months after the disaster has occurred. The data collection will include information that will enable the reconstruction of a baseline as well as information on how the situation has changed.

  12. Field Testing • The first field test was conducted in late 2011 in Bihar, India. Following flooding earlier in the year, a team including researchers from the University of East Anglia, spent a week interviewing communities using the draft methodology and tools. • This field test led to a number of improvements in the methodology, of which a revised version was tested in Guatemala in March 2012 as a Retrospective study. • The third field test will be held in Sri Lanka in May/June 2012, and once the guide has been drafted, a final field test will be undertaken.

  13. Who is the Guide for? • While Monitoring and Evaluation professionals are the primary target audience for this guide, there are many other staff who will benefit from this guide. • The reach of this Guide should not be restricted to those directly measuring impact in the field – headquarters communications or fundraising staff should familiarise themselves with the ways to measure impact to ensure a consistent approach across fundraising, programming and reporting.

  14. Contents of the Guide • Guidance on how to sample data, train staff in data collection • Household and community surveys • Qualitative and quantitative studies • How to extrapolate the findings of data pertaining to individual programmes • Single-agency and multi-agency evaluation contexts

  15. Importance for the sector • This Guide will provide practical and field tested tools for humanitarian NGOs, United Nations agencies and donors to measure the impact their programmes have on households. • The Guide will help agencies to ensure better quality and more needs-based humanitarian responses, through strengthened evidence on which to base decision making and reporting.

  16. For further information contact info@ecbproject.org www.ecbproject.org/measuring-change

More Related