Social Development Policies, Results and Learning: a Multi-agency
Review
This report is one of the outputs from a multi-agency review, for DFID's
Social Policies and Systems Project (SPSP), on social policies and systems
practices in other development agencies. The aim of this paper is to inform
on approaches taken by donor agencies in developing and implementing social
policies and systems and to assess the effectiveness of these investments
in terms of positive social policy outcomes. It discusses the relevance, for
policy-makers and practitioners, of the information produced in the evaluation
of the impact of aid interventions.
The paper starts by analysing the role of social policy in the strategies
of the donors organisations. It concludes that social policy is mainly implicit,
sporadic, inadequately described, and in some cases inconsistent. Although
social policies of partner governments are often discussed in policy documents
and evaluations, it is not generally clear how such assessments are used by
donors to shape their country strategies, and still less clear whether (and
if so how) they inform donors' overall aid, foreign and domestic policies.
Before undertaking the assessment of the outcomes of the social policy programmes,
the paper discusses the relevance of the information generated in the their
evaluation. It is argued that there are few examples of systematic use of
impact information to shape sector or country programmes or aid policies and
allocations other than at project level. Furthermore, modifications of policies,
macro-level practices, priorities, and aid allocations are influenced by a
variety of factors, among which information about donors' own achievements
plays only a very minor role. On the other hand, it is argued that this information
is not useful for policy-makers and planners. The paper shows that the main
sources for information and influence, even at the head office level, are
informal ways, such as short memos; personal rather than institutional memory;
networks rather than rationally planned communication channels; chance encounters
and lunch meetings rather than organised meetings. It is concluded that externally-driven
evaluation studies are widely regarded as wasteful, since people learn best
through participatory assessment of what they themselves are achieving. Searching
for generic information on approaches that get good results may therefore
be an unfruitful exercise. More effective would be for social development
advisers to sharpen up their concepts of social development by defining categories
of people, problems and processes that are of critical importance to good
development.
Finally, the paper reviews the process of evaluation of the outcomes of social
policy projects undertaken in these institutions. It concludes that the evaluation
work is dominated by the purveying of truistic 'lessons' which are not new
lessons. What is needed is more analysis of why these lessons are being ignored.
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Author:
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Thin, N., Good, T., and Hodgson, R.
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Publisher:
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DFID (The UK Department for International Development)
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Date:
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1997
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http://www.dfid.gov.uk/
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