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Result Based Project Design

  1. United Nations University Institute for the Advanced Study of Sustainability Result Based Project Design Jonghwi Park Head of Innovation and Education
  2. • Warming up • What is “Result-Based Project Design and Management (RBM)” • Applying RBM to my project design All the materials in this lecture were adopted from: UNDG. (2011). Result-based Management Handbook. (Part 1 and Part 2 only, p.1-22). https://unsdg.un.org/sites/default/files/UNDG-RBM-Handbook-2012.pdf Outline
  3. I. Warming up
  4. What do you think are the most important components of the project design and implementation? Write them in the chat. Warming up
  5. • Project A aimed to promote girls secondary education in Myanmar. What is the problem with this project report? Source: UNESCO Institute of Statistics (UIS) https://uis.unesco.org/en/country/mm
  6. • Project B is a 2-year project that aimed at building capacity of community leaders in addressing local climate change issues. It successfully meet the project goals through the following outputs: 1. 1 capacity building programme developed. 2. 30 community leaders trained. 3. 82% of the trained community leaders said the training was useful and relevant. What is the problem with this project report?
  7. II. What is RBM?
  8. • A project/programme management strategy (used at UN) • Includes and views all actors contributing directly or indirectly to achieving a set of results (e.g. national gov’t, implementers, beneficiaries, NGOs, UN entities, etc.) • Ensures that your activities contribute to the desired results (outputs, outcomes and higher-level goals or impact) • uses information and evidence on actual results to inform decision making on the design of programmes What is Result Based Project Design and Management (RBM)?
  9. • To measure changes in lives, not just a short-term output • To include all the stakeholders (inclusive) • To make all the stakeholders accountable Why RBM?
  10. RBM Cycle
  11. What is the most pressing issues that you would like to solve? • Understand the target beneficiaries • Analyze the readiness of all stakeholders • Data-oriented, evidence-based! What do you want to change? • Skill? Knowledge? Attitude? • Collective results of those changes? Institutional? Setting the vision
  12. Setting the vision: Example The example was taken from student assignments submitted by Kovavisarach, Zhu, Boateng and Iwamoto (2021) in a post graduate course of UNU IAS.
  13. • UN official SDG data portal: https://unstats.un.org/sdgs/dataportal • The most recent UN report: https://unstats.un.org/sdgs/report/2022/ • World Bank Data: https://data.worldbank.org/ • World Development Indicators (by World Bank) https://databank.worldbank.org/source/world-development-indicators - useful to choose certain countries and export data • Specific SDGs: visit the secretariat UN agencies’ website •UNHCR (https://www.unhcr.org/asia/figures-at-a-glance.html) •UNESCO (http://uis.unesco.org/) •ITU (https://www.itu.int/en/ITU-D/Statistics/Pages/stat/default.aspx ) Data informed project design
  14. RBM result chain
  15. Defining the result map and framework Inputs • Funding • HR training Activities • Conducting a training • Developing a curriculum/mat erials Outputs • Changes in skills • New products • Publications (Youtube videos, websites, etc.) Outcomes • Changes in behaviors & attitudes • Institutional changes • Policy, social actions, processes Impact • Changes in people’s lives • SDGs
  16. Result framework Impact: changes in conditions Outcomes: changes in capacity and performance of the primary duty-bearers Outputs: What all implementers produce Activities: what all implementers do Inputs: what all stakeholders invest in
  17. Result framework: Example – Reducing ALDFG to protect the ocean Impact: changes in conditions Reduced amount of ALDFG (Abandoned, Lost or Discarded Fishing Gear) in the Philippines Outcomes: changes in capacity and performance of the primary duty-bearers • Enhanced understanding of the impact of ALDFG among small scale fishery community • Enhanced understanding of the causes of ALDFG among small scale fishery community • Actions taken to reduce the ALDFG Outputs: What all implementers produce • Manuals and video on ALDFG for fishery community • User-friendly apps to monitor the amount of ALDFG • Revised marine policy Activities: what all implementers do • Policy development workshop and consultation • 3 training workshops for fishery community leaders • 30 field trips with the fishers Inputs: what all stakeholders invest in HR capacity, facilities, funding, technology, Indicator 14.1.1 “index of coastal eutrophication and floating plastic debris density”
  18. How do we know it was successful? (or achieved the intended changes?) •Indicators •Baseline data •Target Impact, outcomes and outputs. Now what?
  19. • Impacts: Changes in people’s lives. This might include changes in knowledge, skill, behaviour, health or living conditions for children, adults, families or communities. • Outcomes: Changes in institutional performance or behavior among individuals or groups. High-level results. • Outputs: Changes in skills or abilities, or the availability of new products and services that are achieved with the resources provided within the time period specified. Must be sufficient to achieve the expected outcomes Three levels of results
  20. • Impact indicators: Long-term visions (e.g. SDGs) • Outcome indicators: These indicators measure actual change in the target group or a situation, such as improved learning, improved teaching, improved management, enhanced service quality, etc. • Output Indicators: These describe project activities such as the number of school leaders trained, the number of workshops, the production of materials, etc.; Types of indicators
  21. • Measure changes, rather than inputs • Example: “Percentage of community leaders trained on the use of ICT” “Number of downloads of the project app” Output vs. outcome indicators Percentage of community leaders who use ICT for the effective communication on climate actions with community people Percentage of app users who changed their transport means for last three months 13.2.2 Total greenhouse gas emissions per year 3.4.1 Mortality rate attributed to cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes or chronic respiratory disease
  22. III. Applying RBM to my project design
  23. 1.Identify the core issues and set the vision (based on DATA!!) 2.Draw and define your result framework (input-activity-output- outcome-impact) – aim for changes (not for activities) – Day 2 3.Plan for monitoring – what are your indicators, target and means of verification? (can be SDG indicators) – Day 4 RBM Steps
  24. Impact: Performance indicator (PI) (disaggregated by gender): Baseline (B): Source and means of verification (M): Target (T): Assumptions and risks Outcome N° 1: Performance indicator (PI) (disaggregated by gender): Baseline (B): Source and means of verification (M): Target (T): Assumptions and risks Output N°1: Performance indicator (PI) (disaggregated by gender): Baseline (B): Source and means of verification (M): Target (T): Assumptions and risks Activities: Actions taken or work performed through which inputs, such as funds, technical support and other types of resources, are mobilized to produce specific outputs. Assumptions and risks 1. 2. Output N°2: Strengthened multi-sectoral collaboration and partnerships between countries and other organisations Performance indicator (PI) (disaggregated by gender): Baseline (B): Source and means of verification (M): Target (T): Assumptions and risks
  25. Jonghwi.park@unu.edu
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