Monthly Corner

Claudy Vouhé shared GRB in local authorities (French)

Gender-Responsive Budgeting (GRB) shows that the development of a budget and budgetary choices are powerful levers in terms of gender equality. We share our lessons learned in the field: a 5-step method, concrete examples (culture, sport, subsidies, public procurement, etc.) and keys to success. An operational work to objectify the impact of public policies and budgets and make RHL accessible.

Anuradha Kapoor Shared Swayam Recent Published Study

This exploratory study foregrounds the largely invisible issue of natal family violence (NFV) in India, exploring its forms, prevalence, and deep, long-term impacts on women's lives. It challenges the myth of the natal home as a safe space and centres survivor voices and lived experiences. The findings expose systemic silences and institutional barriers to justice. It offers vital insights for policy reform, feminist praxis, and deeper societal reflection.

Research Workshop on School Violence Prevention and Response - BLOG POST

Blog post summarizing key findings from each presentation and highlighting the outstanding research of all participants

Tara Prasad Gnyawali - Narrative

My flashback to working with wildlife-affected communities living in a biological transboundary corridor in Bardiya, Nepal, where I spent my golden 15 years. This story reflects changes that demonstrate how a community's tolerance extends to coexistence, and that is only due to the well-integrated planning of Ecotourism opportunities for the community.

Mehreen Farooq - BLOG

Vacancies

  • We’re Hiring: National Evaluation Consultant – Bangladesh

UN Women is recruiting a National Evaluation Consultant (Bangladesh) to support the interim evaluation of the Joint Regional EmPower Programme (Phase II).

This is a great opportunity to work closely with the Evaluation Team Leader and contribute to generating credible, gender-responsive evidence that informs decision-making and strengthens programme impact.

📍 Location: Dhaka, Bangladesh (home-based with travel to project locations)
📅 Apply by: 24 February 2026, 5:00 PM
🔗 Apply here: https://lnkd.in/gar4ciRr

If you are passionate about feminist evaluation, gender equality, and rigorous evidence that drives change (or know someone who is) please apply or share within your networks.

  • Seeking Senior Analyst - IPE Global

About the job

IPE Global Ltd. is a multi-disciplinary development sector consulting firm offering a range of integrated, innovative and high-quality services across several sectors and practices. We offer end-to-end consulting and project implementation services in the areas of Social and Economic Empowerment, Education and Skill Development, Public Health, Nutrition, WASH, Urban and Infrastructure Development, Private Sector Development, among others.

Over the last 26 years, IPE Global has successfully implemented over 1,200 projects in more than 100 countries. The group is headquartered in New Delhi, India with five international offices in United Kingdom, Kenya, Ethiopia, Philippines and Bangladesh. We partner with multilateral, bilateral, governments, corporates and not-for-profit entities in anchoring development agenda for sustained and equitable growth. We strive to create an enabling environment for path-breaking social and policy reforms that contribute to sustainable development.

Role Overview

IPE Global is seeking a motivated Senior Analyst – Low Carbon Pathways to strengthen and grow its Climate Change and Sustainability practice. The role will contribute to business development, program management, research, and technical delivery across climate mitigation, carbon markets, and energy transition. This position provides exceptional exposure to global climate policy, finance, and technology, working with a team of high-performing professionals and in collaboration with donors, foundations, research institutions, and public agencies.

More Details Please go through

Hi everyone. We'd welcome your view point and experience of working with a 'Theory of Change'.

They have been broadly criticized for being too cause-effect for systemic evaluation. But is it possible to change this view by asking critical questions about its nature? Can we ask questions about the TOC's determination? What assumptions underlye it? Does it conceal power dynamics that would be opened up if we were to probe more deeply at the TOCs margins? Is there ever a circumstance where we can deviate from the TOC to pursue ideas and information and still call it a TOC? In short - can we make TOCs systemic?

What thoughts come to your mind?

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Replies to This Discussion

Thanks Ann, yes, I think that we can develop more systemic ToCs. We sought to do this with the ACCRA evaluation I've just posted with a linked message to you. What helped us in this was that Oxfam and the other ACCRA partners were committed to a gender transformative programme that focused on governance systems. Furthermore, as we were undertaking an impact evaluation drawing on contribution analysis, the focus of our evaluation was on a wider change system rather than simply on the programme itself. In the evaluation process, we also had to work with the power dynamics between the ACCRA programme funders in the UK and the ACCRA programme delivery in Ethiopia (also Uganda and Mozambique) which was interesting. Especially we found different ToCs in the UK and among the African partners. So we sought to be transparent about this, and to work with the tensions involved. best wishes, John

Hi John

This sounds like an interesting and gritty evaluation John. It would be interesting to see how the boundary analysis approach we've described in the ISE4GEMs Guidance would have worked in your planning phases - to really articulate the inclusion/exclusions of the methods, field sites, stakeholders, etc.

I wonder too what analysis methods you used to pull this all together. Sounds like attention to power and positionality most likely played an important role in the programme/s. What to do when we have incongruent TOCs? I guess a systemic TOC calls for multiple interpretations of why and how change happens - recognising that this is a dynamic process. Just because it is on paper at a Head Office in London does not make it fixed and real. 

Thanks for sharing your thoughts with me John,

Anne

Greetings from the middle of Canada,

I work a lot with Theory of Change and have found it incredibly useful in framing a range of questions for strategic planning, program planning, stakeholder analysis, outcome clarification, and evaluation. I start most of my work with a stakeholder mapping on a big piece of paper with coloured markers and that allows me to have the "power" discussions. I can then use those to identify evaluation narratives, as different stakeholders are looking for different kinds of outcomes and when resources are tight, organizations need to focus on data that will provide the best strategic feedback. 

As a result of all the resulting discussions, which can go as deep as needed for any given circumstance, I think T of C definitely raises awareness of the systems underlying everything. It seems to me that the linear "manufacturing/assembly line" mindset that has predominated our discourse is finally giving way to a more ecologically-influenced, network-like mindset of interrelationships and T of C reflects that.

Mind you, and tool is just a tool. Use it in the way that makes the most sense to your context. Be aware of the consequences of modifying, for sure, but modify as you need to. just be transparent about where you've modified and keep an eye on consequences. For example, sometimes I focus on the evaluation questions (what is the broader impact?) without having spent as much as time on needs assessment (what's the problem you're trying to solve?), so I need to remember to probe a little more about other aspects of the organization's work or processes.

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