Addressing gender in impact evaluation: What should be considered?

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Addressing gender in impact evaluation: What should be considered?
Abstract
Gender and sexuality are intimately entwined; we must not lose sight of the ways in which gender affects non-heterosexual people, transgender people and people who do not identify as either male or female. • Gender and gender-related injustice is a feature of all interventions, whatever the focus, be it agriculture, capacity building, disaster management, education, health, peace building, water, sanitation and hygiene, or other. • Showing an increase in the number of women participants in an intervention is not the same as demonstrating gender impact. An ‘add women and stir’ approach is not good enough. • A good intervention design will identify critical inequalities and conduct a needs assessment that clearly identifies gender-related issues. If this needs assessment feeds directly into the programme theory, it will facilitate assessment of the intervention’s gender-related impact and will be more likely it is to have positive gender-related impact.
Institution
Methods Lab
Date
October 2015
Pages
24
Accessed
2018-11-10
Citation
Fletcher, G. (2015). Addressing gender in impact evaluation: What should be considered? (p. 24). Methods Lab. https://www.odi.org/sites/odi.org.uk/files/odi-assets/publications-opinion-files/9934.pdf