Blogs

We collect knowledge-rich blogs from evaluators and persons both within and without our community. These blogs offer writers the opportunity to narrate in less formal writing styles their personal evaluation experiences, capture evaluation findings in easy-to-understand ways while engaging the community with other relevant knowledge.

Displaying 181 - 183 of 183

Biases in impact evaluation

Andrew Zubiri's picture
By: Andrew Zubiri, Content Moderator, Climate Investment Funds
On: Wednesday, Oct 26, 2011

You’ve finished writing your evaluation report containing a neat LogFrame and objective and verifiable indicators. Rating: highly satisfactory. That’s good, but is it true for the development intervention as a whole?

Who gets to claim the credit?

Christine Woerlen's picture
By: Christine Wörlen, Senior Evaluation Consultant, Arepo Consult Germany
On: Sunday, Oct 23, 2011

In the evaluation of climate change mitigation interventions a lot of questions revolve around the greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation impact. Did the intervention actually reduce GHG emissions? And if yes: Who can claim that his actions were the cause for that? What a difficult question. For one, it is always hard to measure something that did not take place like the GHG emissions that were supposedly avoided. But beyond this conundrum, additional attribution issues are introduced through the indirect nature of many climate mitigation interventions.

Plugging water security holes in a developing world (video)

Andrew Zubiri's picture
By: Andrew Zubiri, Content Moderator, Climate Investment Funds
On: Friday, Sep 09, 2011

Water is one of the valuable natural resources that climate change will affect. The climate projects lie on extreme sides that could bring extreme consequences. Too much water would submerge human settlements and destroy livelihoods and properties; too little of it would result to drought in already arid areas.

There are people and places that may seem less prone to these impacts. However, they already encounter another water problem. For them, access to clean and potable water has been for a long time and still remain a problem. Compound this by climate change impacts and it can...

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