Online Roundtable: Lessons from using Most Significant Change to evaluate governance and human rights initiatives in international development

Roundtable

Sobre o evento

Participants will collectively reflect upon lessons from the field using the most significant change technique to monitor and evaluate development aid programs in the areas of human rights and governance. Two case studies from the Global South will be presented, a program to end violence against women and an anti-corruption program. Success stories and common challenges will be share with regards to the suitability of the technique for the aforementioned thematic areas, stakeholder engagement, facilitation of the process, determination of the most significant stories, robustness of the results and ethical consideration issues.

Orador/a

Nome Título Biography
Kimberly Inksater Executive Director; Monitor and Evaluator 25 years of international experience as an evaluator of programs on democratic governance and human rights for development agencies. Comprehensive knowledge of RBM and its tools as well as evaluation methods. Renowned for her participatory facilitation techniques. Founder of JGG.
Sara Siebert VAWG prevention specialist Master’s in Public Health, prevention specialist of VAWG with 23 years of work experience. She has implemented the Raising Voices’ SASA! methodology and has been in a leadership role to several SASA! adaptations worldwide. She currently collaborates with Raising Voices and Beyond Borders.
Cheyanne Scharbatke-Church Prof. Aid Effectiveness and Human Security at Tufts University, Founder of Besa Master’s in International Relations, Professor of Practice and Paddock Teaching Award recipient at The Fletcher School, Tufts University. Co-director of the Corruption, Justice and Legitimacy Program, Founder of Besa, specialized in evaluation, measurement, learning and program design.

Tópicos e Temas

Acadêmicos NA-Government Officials NA-Non-Profit Organizers NA-Evaluation Practitioners

Event Details

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