Seite - (000093) - in Evaluating Climate Change Action for Sustainable Development
Bild der Seite - (000093) -
Text der Seite - (000093) -
Sharingfindings along theway is a goodway to foster the inclusive involve-
ment of as wide a range of stakeholders as possible in project planning and
implementation. Encouraging researchers to get early drafts of findings out to
potential users for feedback from early on is oneway to build a learning culture
and to encourage open-mindedness.
Rigid application of just one specific approachmost likely will not work.
Whether it is the adoption of a technology, an M&E methodology, a learning
approach or a scientific result, it is often not thewhole package that is attractive
to users but specific pieces.Weneed to allowusers to cherry pickwhile ensuring
that the relevant linkages remain intact so that thecontext isnot lost forotherswho
maywant other cherries.
Solutions that are good enough rather than optimal. In many domains of
knowledge and practice there is no best practice or option, particularly when the
problem is complex and resources are constrained. CCAFS made considerable
changes once it had started to implement an approach based onTOC and impact
pathways, and in timemoved towardsa leaner andsimplermodel.Timewill tell if
someof thedetails inevitably lost in thisprocesswill need tobeaddedback in,but
the notionof “good enough” systemsneeds to be akeyguidingprinciple.
Addressing tensions across scale. CCAFS is still in the process of embedding
TOCs for the different organizational units of the program, in order to provide a
flexible framework that allows for aggregation of output, outcomes and targets
across thedifferentunits.Forexample, targetsneed tobe framedlocallywithusers
and beneficiaries, and voiced in such away as to allow theflexibility to dealwith
uncertaintyandemergingprioritiesandopportunities.Newinvestmentsof timeand
effortmaybeneeded to identifyandworkwithnon-traditionalpartners topromote
behavioral change in shared IPs.
Providingvalue formoney.Many funding agencies now require that grantees
demonstrate value for money. The Deutsche Gesellschaft für Zusammenarbeit
states that its ‘work is systematically geared towards results, the yardstick by
which we measure the success of our work. We want to help achieve tangible
positivechangeson theground’ (GIZ2015).Somehavecritiqued thewholenotion
of payment by results as applied todevelopment and research-for-development on
the basis that it provides perverse incentives that actually diminishes cost-
effectiveness (see Chambers 2014). As noted above, there is much work still to
doonappropriatemeasurementmechanisms,but thisdoesnotdiminish theneed to
demonstrate accountability.
Balancing science and outcomes. Research is often curiosity-driven, and tra-
ditional indicators of success center on peer-reviewed publications in high-profile
academic journals. In today’s highly competitive research environment another
crucial successfactor relates tofundraising: theability towriteandwincompetitive
research proposals. Neither of these motivations for research is guaranteed to
deliver development outcomes. For CGIAR and its research programs, it is still
early days, but preliminary results suggest that “successfulRBM” relates to effec-
tive and efficient research leading to outcomes, with a minimum of perverse
incentives. The building of an IPwith a narrative TOC forces researchers to give
74 T.Schuetz et al.
Evaluating Climate Change Action for Sustainable Development
- Titel
- Evaluating Climate Change Action for Sustainable Development
- Autoren
- Juha I. Uitto
- Jyotsna Puri
- Rob D. van den Berg
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 3.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-43702-6
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 365
- Schlagwörter
- Climate Change, Sustainable Development, Climate Change/ Climate Change Impacts, Environmental Management
- Kategorien
- Naturwissenschaften Umwelt und Klima