Rising to the challenge: How can humanitarian evaluation better support system-wide learning?

Date
26 Oct 2020
Time
14:00 - 15:30, GMT

How can we make better use of evaluation evidence to foster positive change and support system-wide learning? While thousands of humanitarian evaluations are conducted across the world, most remain focused at the project level, with relatively few synthesis studies and joint evaluations and almost no evaluations that address system-wide issues. These gaps are particularly visible when the humanitarian sector grapples with large challenges such as the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Join ALNAP for a lively discussion on the current value and role of evaluation in supporting system-wide learning. We will discuss how evaluation practice can better inform decisions on building back better during COVID-19 and what needs to be done to overcome current obstacles to system-wide learning. Is the lack of system-wide learning due to how evaluations are conducted, or to how evaluations are commissioned and utilised after completion? How can the sector as a whole become more strategic in identifying evidence gaps and areas where evaluative evidence is abundant, but not fully utilised? 

    ALNAP will also launch Evalmapper, its new online evaluation mapping tool, designed to support more coordinated and strategic approaches to learning from the vast evaluation evidence base currently available on ALNAP’s HELP Library.

    Introductory remarks:

    • John Mitchell (Director, ALNAP)

    Chair:

    • Susanna Morrison-Métois (Senior Research Fellow, ALNAP)

    Panel:

    • Andrea Cook (Director of Evaluation, World Food Programme)
    • Ziad Moussa (Independent evaluation expert & Former IOCE President)
    • Anette Wilhelmsen (Senior Advisor, Evaluation Department, NORAD)
    • James Darcy (Independent evaluation expert)