This inception note was prepared by the WFP’s Office of Evaluation (OEV) and World Bank’s Development Impact Evaluation (DIME) department based upon a completed pilot lean impact evaluation of the home-grown school feeding programme in Burundi during the 2022/2023 scholastic year and a feasibility assessment undertaken during an in-country mission, which included consultations with key stakeholders in June 2023.
Ahead of the October-December 2022 rainy season, forecasts indicated that there was an increased chance of a failed rainy season in Ethiopia’s Somali region. WFP and its partners implemented three anticipatory actions, anticipatory cash, early warning information and rangeland enclosure and fodder production.
This inception note was prepared by the WFP’s Office of Evaluation (OEV) and World Bank’s Development Impact Evaluation (DIME) department based upon an initial feasibility assessment undertaken during an in-country mission, which included consultations with key stakeholders in March 2023.
The impact evaluation is intended to estimate the impacts of the UNICEF-WFP joint resilience programme on absorptive, adaptive, and transformative resilience capacities.
The impact evaluation contributes to the Office of Evaluation's Climate & Resilience impact evaluation window. Also, through this impact evaluation, WFP and DIME are working together to complement other ongoing efforts and to guide future investments and activities related to resilience in The Sahel.
This Rwanda impact evaluation baseline report details key findings from the baseline data on key outcomes, that include measures of resilience, consumption, coping strategies, earnings, women’s agency, and women’s social and economic empowerment
This decentralized evaluation was commissioned by the WFP China Office and covers the ‘Impact Evaluation of the Preschool Nutrition Pilot in Selected Counties of Xiangxi Prefecture, Hunan, PR China’ and “evaluation period from 2018 to 2021”. It was carried out in ‘2021’.
New programmes, technologies and data sources present great opportunities for WFP to harness the full potential of impact evaluation as a tool for learning.
This brief presents the first window-level pre-analysis plan (PAP) developed for the WFP Climate and Resilience Impact Evaluation Window, which is implemented jointly by the World Food Programme’s (WFP) Office of Evaluation (OEV), Asset Creation and Livelihood Unit, the Climate and Disaster Risk Reduction Unit, and the World Bank’s Development Impact Evaluation (DIME) department.
School-based programmes are one of the most extensive social safety nets worldwide, with an estimated 388 million children worldwide currently benefiting from school feeding.