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Title: WORKSHOP


1
  • WORKSHOP
  • Building an Asian community of practice on
    monitoring and budget analysis
  • 9 - 11 July, Phnom Penh, Cambodia

The use of Social Indicators for advocay and
monitoring the Social Watch experience.
2
Advocacy
  • A strategy of political influence that defends
    and pushes an issue or agenda in a certain space
    of power.
  • An strategy that is aimed at changing not only
    the laws and regulations related to those issues
    but the way they are understood by the rest of
    the society.
  • These strategies develop from social or
    development actors and imply a wide view of
    politics, beyond the borders of political
    parties.
  • And they also involves a series of relations with
    other actors such as the state, media, interest
    groups, etc.

3
Stages
  1. Define a clear political objective As a result
    of a broader agenda.
  2. Identify other actors, their agendas and
    interests.
  3. Establish strategic alliances, and their costs.
  4. Planning attainable advocacy actions and
    measuring their impacts.

4
  • Why do we want to advocate a certain issue?
    (substantiation).
  • What do we want to advocate for? (expected
    results).

5
Different types of advocacy actions
  • Lobby It implies making pressure on a particular
    person or group with certain relative power for
    it to guide its actions or make decisions
    according to our political objective.
  • Awareness raising the action is aimed to put the
    issue on the public agenda or to raise awareness
    on the issue among a certain group of persons or
    actors.

6
  • Mobilization it implies that citizens meet in a
    public space to transmit their common defensive
    or offensive position.

7
Tensions on the road towards advocacy
  • Tensions among actors
  • Local-global tensions
  • Tensions among types of strategies
  • d) Tensions among different advocacy spaces

8
Local-global tensions
  • Global agendas affect regional agendas, which
    affect national and local agendas and vice versa
    .
  • Interconnection of advocacy agendas at
    various levels
  • Allows the collective action of actors in
    different levels

9
  • The agenda of the founders prevails over those
    who are working at a local level.
  • Communication rationalities
  • Information flows

10
Linking the local with the global the SW Report
  • Every year, the report analyzes in depth a
    different matter. The discussion on the issues is
    strongly related to the global agenda and to the
    subjects and frameworks that are being discussed
    internationally at this time.
  • The choice of the subject is made on a
    participatory process basis in which members
    share their opinion on the relevance each matter
    proposed has for their national advocacy agendas.

11
  • The international perspective is complemented
    with the production of national and regional
    reports.
  • The prevailing idea in the production of indexes
    and tables is that of linking levels, producing
    comparable information internationally but also
    enabling a local reading.

12
  • Key moments to make its contents known are the
    launchings which take place globally and in each
    country, where most of the attention is focused
    on the results of the national chapter.
  • The launchings are vital to convey the way in
    which Social Watch understands the problems
    affecting development (and the alternatives for
    their solution) to people in key places and to
    raise awareness among public opinion on the
    relevance of addressing certain situations that
    are socially unfair.

13
Reaching the goal challenges for advocacy
  • Challenges in alliance articulation and building
  • Challenges in identity and legitimacy building
  • Challenges in the production of policy-oriented
    contents
  • Challenges in impact, efficiency, systemizing and
    resources

14
Legitimacy
  • Definition the recognized right to influence in
    the formulation and implementation of policies.
  • Main sources Political and technical.
  • The ability to advocate will be determined both
    by an organizations political legitimacy as by
    its technical legitimacy.

15
  • More and more, the legitimacy of an organization
    or group of them has to do with their technical
    capacity. With the ability to produce valid,
    relevant and useful information.
  • The communication of results can play a role as
    important as the results themselves.

16
Challenges in the production of policy-oriented
contents
  • CSO members are more focused on the promotion of
    equity and justice, the promotion of social
    change or the empowerment of certain social
    groups.
  • Researchers, in general, will focus their efforts
    in the production of elegant theory, the
    generation of valid data and the production of
    replicable results.

17
  • Delimiting the problem in such a way that both
    the resources contributed by researchers and by
    activists are involved.
  • Setting shared values, goals and expectations.
  • Identifying the institutional arrangements that
    may favor or hinder communication.
  • Learning from the problem collectively but also
    from the collective learning process.

18
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19
Social indicators
  • What are they?
  • What is their utility?
  • How to choose them?
  • A social indicators system
  • The work of Social Watch

20
  • Social indicators are tools for discussion and
    policy-making in diverse fields and arenas both
    within countries and at an international level.
  • Although their construction does involve
    technical elements, indicators can and should be
    accessible for appropriation and criticism by the
    community.
  • So they can give strength to advocacy practices

21
What is a social indicator?
  • A social indicator is a tool to measure an
    abstract social concept (of theoretical or
    programmatic interest). It translates some aspect
    of social reality into tangible figures.
  • It is a construction based on a certain
    methodology that yields information about an
    aspect of a real situation and its changes.
  • Social indicators are conventionally adopted and
    their use becomes generalised and legitimised
    through user perception of their utility (in
    social, economic and political fields).
  • Indicators both show and hide aspects of social
    life what do we need to show to make
    inequalities visible?

22
What is their utility?
  • They are tools that provide information on a
    situation or process of interest
  • Assist in policy decision-making, the setting of
    goals, initiative result evaluation and the
    monitoring of progress, regression or stagnation
  • Provide evidence and figures to facilitate an
    independent monitoring of initiatives
  • Can function as an early warning system to
    prevent the development of critical situations
  • Enable the identification of vulnerable groups or
    risk situations.

23
Construction and selection of indicators
  • Data become an indicator in response to a
    question about reality and such questions arise
    from a certain view of that reality.
  • From the concept / problem to the indicator
  • Conceptually define the problem or area to be
    studied
  • Define the dimensions and sub-dimensions of the
    analysis
  • Identify pertinent indicators in each dimension
  • Examples of concepts the dimensions and variables
    of which need to be defined
  • Social development
  • Poverty
  • Equity

24
Concept, dimensions, indicators
  • (CONCEPT) Gender equity
  • (DIMENSION) Education
  • (INDICATORS) Literacy gap
  • Primary enrolment gap
  • Secondary enrolment gap
  • Tertiary enrolment gap
  • (DIMENSION) Economic activity
  • (DIMENSION) Empowerment

25
The collection of data and criteria for
constructing and selecting indicators
  • The information needed to construct the
    indicators can be collected directly (PRIMARY
    SOURCE) or come from a collection made by others
    (SECONDARY SOURCE).
  • Some criteria
  • Relevance
  • Clarity
  • Social legitimacy
  • Validity
  • Reliability
  • Specificness
  • Sensitivity
  • Durability
  • Exact in calculation methodology, robust and
    statistically validated
  • Availability
  • Systematic collection
  • Timely
  • Comparability
  • Disaggregatability

26
Indicators and Indexes
  • Indicators (univariated) e.g Infant mortality
    rate, Literacy rate, PBI
  • Indexes (summary measure of several indicators)
    e.g. HDI, BCI, GEI
  • An index is a single composite value that
    expresses how a variable behaves when data from
    the various indicators is considered together.
  • For the synthesis of indicators it must be
    decided which is the most conceptually and
    operatively appropriate criterion to reduce data
    to a single value. This can include mathematical
    calculations and/or logical processes. A very
    much used criterion is the simple or weighted sum
    of the indicators values (in this case it is
    important that all indicators are measured in the
    same scale)

27
What is a social indicators system?
  • Many dimensions are needed to characterize a
    social phenomenon.
  • An indicators system is a group of indicators
    that capture an aspect of social reality.
  • Examples
  • a system of health indicators
  • a system of housing indicators
  • a system of labour market indicators

28
Social indicators system
29
Ex. Social indicators system
30
  • The work of Social Watch

31
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
DIMENSIONS
WATER AND SANITATION
I T INFORMATION
FOOD
HEALTH (IMMUNIZATION AND MORBIMORTALITY)
GENDER EQUITY
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
EDUCATION
INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION STATISTICS
INTERNATIONAL HEALTH STATISTICS
INTERNATIONAL FOOD STATISTICS
INTERNATIONAL STATISTICS
SYSTEM OF SOCIAL INDICATORS
FOOD INDICATORS
EDUCATION INDICATORS
HEALTH INDICATORS
OTHER INDICATORS
32
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33
The position of countries in each thematic area
  • The situation a country, according to each
    indicator, is given by the latest available value
    for that indicator.
  • The average values of each thematic area are
    classified to create four country categories
  • Countries in better situation
  • Countries above average
  • Countries below average
  • Countries in worse situation
  • A fifth group is also presented (Countries with
    insufficient data to summarise the area).

34
Progress or regression? Rate of change
  • The rate of change for each country is obtained
    by considering the variation in the values of the
    indicator over the time period within which the
    measurements are made. The quotient between the
    variation in the indicator and the time period
    reflects the rate of change for the item in
    question.
  • Five categories
  • Significant progress (countries progressing at a
    higher rate than the average rate of progressing
    countries)
  • Slight progress (countries progressing at a lower
    rate than the average rate of progressing
    countries)
  • Stagnant (countries not showing significant
    progression)
  • Slight regression (countries regressing at a
    lower rate than the average rate of regressing
    countries)
  • Significant regression (countries regressing at a
    higher rate than the average rate of regressing
    countries)

35
COUNTRIES CURRENT SITUATION
36
COUNTRIES EVOLUTION
37
BCIBasic Capabilities IndexA synthetic index
focused on the minimal or basic capabilities
essential for social development
  • Under 5 mortality rate
  • Births attended by skilled personnel
  • Children reaching 5th grade

38
SOCIAL WATCHs BCI. RESULTS RANKING
39
Gender Equity Index A synthetic index for the
analysis of gender equity.
  • Dimensions and indicators
  • Empowerment ( of women in technical positions,
    of women in management and government positions,
    of women in parliaments, of women in
    ministerial posts).
  • Economic activity (income gaps, of economically
    active women (excluding the agriculture sector)).
  • Education (literacy rate gap, primary school
    enrolment rate gap, secondary school enrolment
    rate gap, tertiary education enrolment rate gap).

40
SOCIAL WATCHs GEI
  • Education gap
  • Economic gap
  • Empowerment gap

41
SOCIAL WATCHs GEI RESULTS RANKING
42
To sum up
  • Social phenomena / problems can be measured
  • Dimension I
  • Indicator I
  • Indicator II
  • Indicator III
  • Dimension II
  • (Indexes)
  • SW work
  • The use of indicators for measuring social
    development / progress and regression
  • Synthetic indexes (BCI, GEI) as advocacy tools

43
Group work
  • Advocacy
  • Is the practice an advocacy action according to
    the definition given?
  • Does it have a clear political objective?
  • Who are the other actors involved?
  • What alliances were formed? What other alliances
    could be useful?
  • What advocacy actions were taken? Suggest other
    actions to complement those.
  • Which were the reasons that originate the action?
    and the expected results?
  • What was the strategy of communication
    implemented? What other means could be used?
  • Does the practice include indicators to diagnose
    the problem and\or evaluate and monitoring the
    results?

44
Group work
  • Social indicators
  • What are the dimensions involved?
  • What indicators could be use to measure those
    dimensions?
  • What kind of sources should be necessary to
    gather (primary or secondary)?
  • What are the advantages or disadvantages of using
    indicators in this case?
  • What would be the contribution of using
    indicators?
  • In which stage of the practice should be better
    to use them? (Diagnostic, advocacy actions,
    evaluation and monitoring)

45
  • Thank you!
  • Split into groups!
  • Have a cup of coffee!
  • We are not singing!
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