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Influencing change : building evaluation capacity to strengthen governance / Ray C. Rist, Marie-Helene Boily, Frederic Martin, editors.

By: Contributor(s): Publication details: Washington, D.C. : World Bank, 2011.Description: xxi, 275 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9780821384039
Subject(s):
Contents:
Introduction: Evaluation Capacity Building: A Conceptual Framework -- Chapter 1: Working toward Development Results: The Case of Sri Lanka -- Chapter 2: The Evaluation of Macroeconomic Institutional Arrangements in Latin America -- Chapter 3: From Evaluating Projects toward Assessing Institutional Performance -- Chapter 4: Evaluation Systems as Strategy Management Tools: Building Dubai's Institutional Learning Capacity -- Chapter 5: A Conceptual for Developing Evaluation Capacities: Building on Good Practice -- Chapter 6: Supporting Evaluation Capacity on Environment and Development -- Chapter 7: Capacity Building: The Indian Experience -- Chapter 8: The Environmental/Rural Development and Food Security Program in Madagascar -- Chapter 9: Recognizing "Helping" as an Evaluation Capacity Development Strategy -- Chapter 10: Building Capacities for Results-Based National M&E Systems -- Chapter 11: Where Is Development Evaluation Going? -- Chapter 12: Old Challenges and New Frontiers -- Chapter 13: Perspectives on Evaluation Capacity Building -- Chapter 14: Lessons Learned in Capacity Building: Where Do We Go from Here?
Summary: In the first section of this book, four chapters explore how evaluation can influence and interact with the change process in policy and institutional development. Wijayatilake recalls a convincing and riveting story about how evaluation was introduced in Sri-Lanka and what kind of striking results could be achieved in a few years through a progressive pragmatic approach and strong leadership. Wiesner reviews the role of evaluation in the formation of macroeconomic policy in Latin America and outlines the role of demand for improved results and performance and of the accountability from the politicians, the private sector and civil society and, in the end, the population. Dimitrov proposes a 7 step approach for tacking institutional Performance evaluation and applies it to the case of the Black Sea Trade and Development Bank. Jaljouli addresses the challenge of the integration of development strategy and the evaluation process and uses Dubai as a case study. In the second section of this book, five chapters present a variety of lessons learnt and good practices in Evaluation Capacity Building (ECB). Heider presents a structured approach to capacity development working at three levels: individual training, institutional development, and an enabling environment and suggests moving from capacities to capabilities. Agrawal and Rao identify various factions influencing the use of evaluation results and show in the case of India how capacity building was used to increase this use. Andriantseheno addresses how an M and E system for a major development program can be set up as part of a programmatic approach using the case study of the Environment/Rural Development and Food Security program in Madagascar. Porter outlines the potential of the helping approaches an evaluation capacity development strategy and uses the Bana Barona/Abantwanu Bethu project in South Africa to prove his point. Clotteau et al. review major challenges in ECB and present a variety of ECB strategies to design and implement Results-Based National M and E systems, building upon a number of experiences in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. The third section of the book discusses new perspectives on ECB. Picciotto outlines a path for the future of development evaluation on the basis of a review of emerging endogenous and exogenous trends. By surveying recent theoretical developments in ECB, Nielsen and Attstrom map the perspectives offered by the contributors in terms of scope, purpose, definitions, and methods and relate key findings and recommendations to the ECB framework offered by Heider' chapter. Van den Berg illustrates how evaluation capacity has been developed and could be further developed in a critical area for the future, i.e. in environment and development. From a review of the first and second sections of the book, Dahlgren underlines that building up evaluation capacity requires not only competence and quality, but taking into account the political and institutional context, cost aspects, the relative importance between learning and accountability, and the differences and similarities between monitoring and evaluation. Finally, following a review of the same papers, McAllister explores the interface between the evaluation function and organizational leadership in setting results strategy and the limitation of results approaches as implemented by the international development community. Overall, the stimulating comparative analysis of the papers presented in sections 1 and 2, questions and own thoughts on perspectives for ECB in the future made by those senior evaluation specialists allow for a more thorough and nuanced book.
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BOOKS MAIN HD 58.8 I54 2011 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 04663

Includes index. Rist, R. C., Boily, M-H., & Martin, F. (Eds.). (2011). Influencing change: Building evaluation capacity to strengthen governance. Washington, D.C.: World Bank.

Introduction: Evaluation Capacity Building: A Conceptual Framework -- Chapter 1: Working toward Development Results: The Case of Sri Lanka -- Chapter 2: The Evaluation of Macroeconomic Institutional Arrangements in Latin America -- Chapter 3: From Evaluating Projects toward Assessing Institutional Performance -- Chapter 4: Evaluation Systems as Strategy Management Tools: Building Dubai's Institutional Learning Capacity -- Chapter 5: A Conceptual for Developing Evaluation Capacities: Building on Good Practice -- Chapter 6: Supporting Evaluation Capacity on Environment and Development -- Chapter 7: Capacity Building: The Indian Experience -- Chapter 8: The Environmental/Rural Development and Food Security Program in Madagascar -- Chapter 9: Recognizing "Helping" as an Evaluation Capacity Development Strategy -- Chapter 10: Building Capacities for Results-Based National M&E Systems -- Chapter 11: Where Is Development Evaluation Going? -- Chapter 12: Old Challenges and New Frontiers -- Chapter 13: Perspectives on Evaluation Capacity Building -- Chapter 14: Lessons Learned in Capacity Building: Where Do We Go from Here?

In the first section of this book, four chapters explore how evaluation can influence and interact with the change process in policy and institutional development. Wijayatilake recalls a convincing and riveting story about how evaluation was introduced in Sri-Lanka and what kind of striking results could be achieved in a few years through a progressive pragmatic approach and strong leadership. Wiesner reviews the role of evaluation in the formation of macroeconomic policy in Latin America and outlines the role of demand for improved results and performance and of the accountability from the politicians, the private sector and civil society and, in the end, the population. Dimitrov proposes a 7 step approach for tacking institutional Performance evaluation and applies it to the case of the Black Sea Trade and Development Bank. Jaljouli addresses the challenge of the integration of development strategy and the evaluation process and uses Dubai as a case study. In the second section of this book, five chapters present a variety of lessons learnt and good practices in Evaluation Capacity Building (ECB). Heider presents a structured approach to capacity development working at three levels: individual training, institutional development, and an enabling environment and suggests moving from capacities to capabilities. Agrawal and Rao identify various factions influencing the use of evaluation results and show in the case of India how capacity building was used to increase this use. Andriantseheno addresses how an M and E system for a major development program can be set up as part of a programmatic approach using the case study of the Environment/Rural Development and Food Security program in Madagascar. Porter outlines the potential of the helping approaches an evaluation capacity development strategy and uses the Bana Barona/Abantwanu Bethu project in South Africa to prove his point. Clotteau et al. review major challenges in ECB and present a variety of ECB strategies to design and implement Results-Based National M and E systems, building upon a number of experiences in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. The third section of the book discusses new perspectives on ECB. Picciotto outlines a path for the future of development evaluation on the basis of a review of emerging endogenous and exogenous trends. By surveying recent theoretical developments in ECB, Nielsen and Attstrom map the perspectives offered by the contributors in terms of scope, purpose, definitions, and methods and relate key findings and recommendations to the ECB framework offered by Heider' chapter. Van den Berg illustrates how evaluation capacity has been developed and could be further developed in a critical area for the future, i.e. in environment and development. From a review of the first and second sections of the book, Dahlgren underlines that building up evaluation capacity requires not only competence and quality, but taking into account the political and institutional context, cost aspects, the relative importance between learning and accountability, and the differences and similarities between monitoring and evaluation. Finally, following a review of the same papers, McAllister explores the interface between the evaluation function and organizational leadership in setting results strategy and the limitation of results approaches as implemented by the international development community. Overall, the stimulating comparative analysis of the papers presented in sections 1 and 2, questions and own thoughts on perspectives for ECB in the future made by those senior evaluation specialists allow for a more thorough and nuanced book.

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