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UNICEF Tanzania: Global study on child poverty and disparities

UNICEF Tanzania: Global study on child poverty and disparities. Processes and partnerships at national level . Presentation prepared for ESAR Social Policy, Monitoring and Evaluation Network Meeting Lilongwe, 7-11 April 2008. Tanzania fully on board.

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UNICEF Tanzania: Global study on child poverty and disparities

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  1. UNICEF Tanzania: Global study on child poverty and disparities Processes and partnerships at national level Presentation prepared for ESAR Social Policy, Monitoring and Evaluation Network Meeting Lilongwe, 7-11 April 2008

  2. Tanzania fully on board • In line with ongoing national concern for poverty alleviation, vulnerability and disparity reduction • Highly competent national team established for the analysis • Integral part of UNICEF programme of cooperation in Policy Advocacy and Analysis, linked to sitan processes • UNICEF Programme colleagues involved in feedback with consultants/national team • Initial $25,000 in thematic funding in 2007 and additional $50,000 in 2008 • Will support analysis, technical assistance, travel, 2 national stakeholder meetings and production/ dissemination of final report and advocacy materials

  3. Composition of National team • Statistical analysis: New School University, Graduate Programme in International Affairs, National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), and University of Dar es Salaam (Demography Dept.) • Policy analysis: National Research Organization (Research on Poverty Alleviation - REPOA) for thematic chapter drafting and analysis, with national coordinator and lead writer

  4. Some modifications from global guidelines • Addition of policy chapter on HIV and AIDS • Separate policy chapter needed on Zanzibar (statistical indicators included in overall mainland and Zanzibar)

  5. Progress to date • Statistical analysis in its third and near final draft (started 7/07) • 1st National workshop on child poverty and disparities held in Jan 08 (Bristol method and preliminary findings from statistical analysis) • First draft policy chapters being reviewed (4/08) • National team preparing to participate in New York meeting in April

  6. 1st national workshop (17-18 Jan 2008) • Organization: NBS; with New School analysts as presenters/facilitators • Aims: capacity development (on methodology); awareness raising (on child poverty) and consultative (on national applicability of global indicators) • Participants: technicians/statisticians, researchers, analysts, development partners, university • Points for follow up: country-specific analysis of non-income poverty indicators and definitions/thersholds; application of methodology to national surveys; additional capacity building workshops; revision of drat report based on discussions

  7. Issues arising • Inappropriateness of some of the Bristol indicators to the national situation (particularly housing and sanitation) (global vs. national standards) • Limitation in restricting statistical analysis to DHS data (richer and more recent sources available • Data from DHs (2004/5) and HBS (2000/1) now quite dated; results of new HBS expected in 7/08 • Unwieldy/overly complex guidelines /templates and tables • Some requested data (particularly on budgets) impossible to get • Policy processes and links to action not a straightforward as guidelines suggest • Unwise separation of statistical and policy teams (as policy team also working on ‘evidence’)

  8. Next steps • National teams (statistics and policy) to participate in NY meeting (April) • Policy chapters to be revised, finalized and synthesized (April/May) • Policy and statistical reports to be merged and results discussed at national stakeholders’ workshop (end May 08) • Final report expected by June 2008, with advocacy materials to be developed thereafter

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