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Re-thinking the Impact of Humanitarian Aid

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Title: Re-thinking the Impact of Humanitarian Aid


1
Re-thinking the Impact of Humanitarian Aid
24th Biannual Meeting Berlin, 2nd December 2008
2
ALNAP 24th Biannual Aims
  • To help clarify key issues around use of
    humanitarian impact assessments
  • To move towards a shared understanding of the
    limits and possibilities of humanitarian impact
    assessment
  • To use this understanding to outline a practical
    vision for future work in this area

3
Overview
  • Humanitarianism transformed and the emergence
    of impact assessment
  • Challenges for assessing impact
  • Conclusions

4
Humanitarianism Transformed
  • Three broad trends since the 1980s contribute to
    the current interest in and debate around
    humanitarian impact assessment
  • Humanitarian aid expanded and politicised
  • Humanitarian aid institutionalised and
    professionalised
  • Changing nature of vulnerability and human
    suffering

5
Increase in initiatives, across and within
agencies
  • Cross agency efforts include SMART HNTS TRIAMS
    Fritz Humanitarian Impact Project the CDA
    Listening Project ALNAP HPP SPHERE
  • Quality Compass ECB Good Enough Guide to
    impact measurement DECs new Accountability
    Framework etc
  • WFP, ECHO and UNICEF all include impact in their
    evaluation guidelines ActionAids ALPS Save the
    Children UKs GIM

6
But despite considerable progress, problems
remain. The Biannual background paper has
identified six key broad challenges
  1. Defining impact assessment
  2. Diverse stakeholders and interests
  3. Indicators, baselines and data
  4. Methodologies
  5. Collective interpretation and analysis
  6. Capacities and incentives

7
1. Defining impact and impact assessment
8
Ideal picture of impact the MDG Goal of
universal primary education by 2015
9
Reality of impact is rather different
  • Universal primary education would be achieved
    at present rates of progress in 2079 in
    sub-Saharan Africa and in 2036 in the Middle East
    and North Africa
  • Social Watch 2007

10
Real world impact is complex
Activity
Output
Outcome
Impact
11
and hard to discern, even a long time after the
fact
12
Attribution or Contribution?
Private Sector
Other NGOs
A.N. NGO
Community and Family
Local partners
Religious organisations
Developing Country Govmts
Civil Society
13
A widely recognised definition of impact
assessment
  • Impact assessment is the systematic analysis
    of the lasting or significant changes positive
    or negative, intended or not in peoples lives
    brought about by a given action or series of
    actions.
  • Novib/Oxfam research project, reported in C.
    Roche, Impact Assessment for Development Agencies

14
Humanitarian action has its own challenges
  • Lack of clarity on IA definition and purpose
  • Rapidly changing humanitarian contexts
  • No consensus on objectives of humanitarian aid
  • Intended impacts of interventions often unclear
    or overambitious

15
Contextual differences between normal development
aid and humanitarian aid situations
  • Development
  • Considerable Lead Time
  • Deliberate pro-active
  • Will take time, be thorough, extensive with
    comprehensive data collection
  • Location chosen
  • Duration planned
  • Beneficiary population identifiable and static
  • IA goals may be made compatible with
    socio-economic ones
  • Humanitarian
  • Sudden onset
  • Reactive
  • May need to be partial in coverage
  • Unpredictable location
  • Uncertain duration
  • Beneficiary population heterogeneous and dynamic
  • Priority given to life saving activities
    sometimes difficult to reconcile with IA goals

16
2. Diverse stakeholders, interests and objectives
17
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18
The challenge of stakeholders (illustrative)
UN agencies
National and local partners
Donors
Media
Affected Population
International NGOs
Private Sector
Red Cross / Red Crescent
Military
Political authorities
19
Different stakeholders have different perceptions
of and interests in impact
  • Enabling different stakeholders to express
    divergent views of impact is crucial to
    successful impact assessment
  • IA findings more likely to be used they meet the
    interests of the end users

20
Different needs may not be reconcilable and
achievable in a single impact assessment
Accountability or Learning?
  • The purpose of most impact assessments is to
    demonstrate past impact and to improve future
    practice, and there may be tension between the
    two.
  • Often, too much is expected If we continue to
    expect evaluation to cover most of the
    accountability needs of the sector, we will be
    disappointed (Sandison, P. 2006).

21
3. Indicators, baselines and data
22
Indicators, Baselines and Data for humanitarian IA
  • Identifying impact indicators involves value
    judgements about what kinds of changes are
    significant for whom (Roche, C. 2000)

23
  • The familiar adage you can lead a horse to
    water, but you cant make it drink illuminates
    the challenge of committing to outcomes. The
    desired outcome is that the horse drinks the
    water. Longer-term outcomes are that the horse
    stays healthy and works effectively. But because
    program staff know they cant make a horse drink
    water, they focus on the things they can control
    leading the horse to water, making sure the tank
    is full, monitoring the quality of the water, and
    keeping the horse within drinking distance of the
    water. In short, they focus on the processes of
    water delivery rather than the outcome of water
    drunk. Patton, M. 1997157-8

24
  • Reports were so consistent in their criticism
    of agency monitoring and evaluation practices
    that a standard sentence could almost be inserted
    into all reports along the lines of It was not
    possible to assess the impact of this
    intervention because of the lack of adequate
    indicators, clear objectives, baseline data and
    monitoring. (ALNAP, 2003)

25
Issues include
  • Weak or non-existent baselines
  • Data is often unavailable or unreliable
  • Data collected is mainly quantitative
  • Monitoring systems focus on process and outputs

26
4. Methodologies
27
Wealth of tools, techniques and approaches are
available
  • Documentary analysis
  • Interviews
  • Questionnaires (including recipient perceptions
    surveys)
  • Monitoring
  • Ex-post evaluation
  • Case studies
  • Participatory Rapid Appraisal (PRA)
  • Experimental / quasi-experimental

28
Qualitative versus quantitative
  • Any research design is shaped by both
    opportunities and constraints
  • Quantitative methods able to tackle what and
    where questions
  • Qualitative methods able to answer why and
    how questions, and are good at capturing process

29
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30
Mixed methods approaches can take into account,
rather than dismiss, the complexity of assessing
humanitarian impact
31
5. Collective interpretation and analysis
32
Improved interpretation and analysis of data
through engagement with affected populations and
other stakeholders
  • Humanitarian impact should not only be about
    providing more and better information, but also
    about making sure that findings are used in ways
    that improve the lives of affected populations
  • Wider stakeholders should also be engaged in this
    process
  • Learning partnerships for impact assessment

33
To date, participation by and accountability to
affected populations has not been a key feature
of impact assessments
  • Attempts to improve this include
  • ECB Good Enough Guide
  • The Quality Compass
  • Feinstein International Center Participatory
    Impact Assessments (PIA)

34
6. Capacities and incentives
35
Capacities and Incentives for improved
humanitarian impact assessment
  • Lack of individual and organisational capacity to
    do good impact assessments
  • TORs are often unclear
  • objectives are not defined clearly within the
    context of the intervention
  • stakeholder analysis is limited
  • timing relates to institutional priorities rather
    than humanitarian need
  • skills relating to impact assessment
    methodologies are lacking
  • Contributing factors high staff turnover lack
    of a learning culture inadequate investment and
    resources

36
There is a considerable lack of incentives
  • Institutional incentives can override
    humanitarian ones too few incentives to conduct
    good impact assessments results-based approaches
    can create perverse incentives
  • A number of cultural barriers and biases that
    hinder good quality humanitarian impact
    assessment

37
Recap six challenges
  1. Defining impact assessment
  2. Diverse stakeholders and interests
  3. Indicators, baselines and data
  4. Methodologies
  5. Collective interpretation and analysis
  6. Capacities and incentives

38
Conclusions
  • Taken as a whole, the humanitarian system has
    been poor at measuring or analysing impact, and
    the introduction of results-based management
    systems in headquarters has yet to feed through
    into improved analysis of impact in the field it
    is arguable that there has been significant
    under-investment in evaluation and impact
    analysis (Hoffman C.A. et al, 2004)
  • Our review gives little indication that there has
    been much movement from the position above,
    articulated in 2004
  • Can we move forward? How?
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