Monitoring and Evaluation of Climate Change Adaptation: New Directions for Evaluation, Number 147

Monitoring and Evaluation of Climate Change Adaptation: New Directions for Evaluation, Number 147

Bours, Dennis
McGinn, Colleen
Pringle, Patrick

24,13 €(IVA inc.)

Monitoring and evaluation (M&E) of climate change adaptation (CCA) poses an assortment of thorny methodological challenges. Individually, none are unique to CCA, but together they represent a very distinctive conundrum facing practitioners and policy makers. Adding to this complexity further, climate change may be global in nature but its impacts, and how we respond to them through adaptation efforts, cut across scales, sectors, and levels of intervention. As investments in climate adaptation increase, organizations are seeking to measure, assess and understand an array of adaptation initiatives, and derive learnings to inform policy and praxis. This issue presents findings from many of the most important contemporary CCA program evaluation research initiatives. The chapters represent the most coherent and current collection of CCA M&E research in this emerging and important field, written by many of its leading experts. Filled with examples and insights in formulating coherent responses to methodological challenges, it will be of interest to M&E scholars and practitioners globally.This is the 147th issue in the New Directions for Evaluation series from Jossey–Bass. It is an official publication of the American Evaluation Association. INDICE: EDITORS NOTES 1..Dennis Bours, Colleen McGinn, Patrick Pringle .1. Evaluating Climate Change Adaptation: Learning From Methods in International Development 13Susannah Fisher, Ayesha Dinshaw, Heather McGray, Neha Rai, Johan Schaar .This article reviews evaluation methods used in the field of international development to draw lessons for the specific challenges of evaluating climate change adaptation. This chapter concludes that although the methods are available, it is how they are applied that can help address these particular challenges. .2. An Actor–Oriented and Context–Specific Framework for Evaluating Climate Change Adaptation 37Dunja Krause, Maria Schwab, J ¨orn Birkmann .The authors outline an assessment framework for evaluating climate change adaptation, which combines three major components: (a) the risk context, (b) individual decision making, and (c) adaptation assessment. .3. Exploring Program Theory to Enhance Monitoring and Evaluation in Ecosystem–Based Adaptation Projects 49Madeleine C. McKinnon, David G. Hole .This article examines how two theory–based tools theory–of–change models and evidence synthesis can be used to instruct informative Ecosystem–Based Adaptation M&E by characterizing pathways to impact, identifying causal mechanisms, distinguishing relevant indicators, and recognizing areas of uncertainty. .4. An Approach to Monitoring and Evaluation of Institutional Capacity for Adaptation to Climate Change: The Case of the United Kingdom s Investment in Ethiopia s Climate–Resilient Green Economy 61Rebecca Adler, Kirsty Wilson, Patrick Abbot, Ursula Blackshaw .This article focuses on capacity–assessment tools that support evidence–based self–assessments of progress towards the Ethiopian government s climate change strategy. .5. Tracking Adaptation and Measuring Development in Isiolo County, Kenya 75Irene Karani, John Mayhew, Simon Anderson .This article outlines the experiences of testing the feasibility of the Tracking Adaptation and Measuring Development (TAMD) framework in Kenya, and its use in assisting policy makers at the subnational level in adaptation planning, monitoring, and evaluation. .6. Meaningful Measurement for Community–Based Adaptation 89Lucy Faulkner, Jessica Ayers, Saleemul Huq .This article presents a new framework for M&E for community–based adaptation, which has applications for general development practice as well as the specificities of climate change adaptation programming. .7. What Indicates Improved Resilience to Climate Change? A Learning and Evaluative Process Developed From a Child–Centered, Community–Based Project in the Philippines 105Joanne Chong, Anna Gero, Pia Treichel .This article presents findings from a child–centered community–based adaptation project in the Philippines that has developed a practical and replicable process for developing evidence–based, local–level indicators of effective adaptation. .8. Linking Monitoring and Evaluation of Adaptation to Climate Change Across Scales: Avenues and Practical Approaches 117Timo Leiter .This article outlines three avenues to link adaptation progress from national and subnational levels. It illustrates how information on adaptation interventions and evaluation results can be connected across scales in order to improve the evidence base for adaptation planning and decision making. .9. Monitoring, Reporting, and Evidence–Based Learning in the Climate Investment Funds Pilot Program for Climate Resilience 129Christine Roehrer, Kouassi Emmanuel Kouadio .This article shares early experiences and emerging lessons from developing the Climate Investment Funds (CIF) Pilot Program for Climate Resilience (PPCR) participatory results–based monitoring and reporting system. .INDEX 147

  • ISBN: 978-1-119-15757-1
  • Editorial: John Wiley & Sons
  • Encuadernacion: Rústica
  • Páginas: 160
  • Fecha Publicación: 26/10/2015
  • Nº Volúmenes: 1
  • Idioma: Inglés