Realist Impact Evaluation: An introduction

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Realist Impact Evaluation: An introduction
Abstract
• Realist evaluation is a member of a family of theory-based evaluation approaches which begin by clarifying the ‘programme theory’: the mechanisms that are likely to operate, the contexts in which they might operate and the outcomes that will be observed if they operate as expected. • Realist approaches assume that nothing works everywhere for everyone: context makes a big difference to programme outcomes. A realist evaluation asks not ‘what works?’ but ‘how or why does this work, for whom, in what circumstances?’ • Realist impact evaluation is most appropriate for evaluating new initiatives or programmes that seem to work but where ‘how and for whom’ is not yet understood; programmes that have previously demonstrated mixed patterns of outcomes; and those that will be scaled up, to understand how to adapt the intervention to new contexts.
Institution
Methods Lab
Date
September 2014
Pages
12
Accessed
2018-11-10
Citation
Westhorp, G. (2014). Realist Impact Evaluation: An introduction (p. 12). Methods Lab. https://www.odi.org/sites/odi.org.uk/files/odi-assets/publications-opinion-files/9138.pdf