Your search found 3 records
1 Howell, J.. (Ed.) 1985. Recurrent costs and agricultural development. London, UK: ODI. 223 p.
Agricultural development ; Costs / Africa
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 338.13 G100 HOW Record No: H01134)

2 Cox, A.; Koning, A.; Hewitt, A.; Howell, J.; Marr, A. 1997. Understanding European community aid: Aid policies, management and distribution explained. London, UK: ODI. xx, 119p.
Financing ; Policy ; Development aid ; Political aspects ; Food aid ; Non-governmental organizations ; Forestry ; Environment ; Health / Europe / Africa / Caribbean / Pacific Islands / Middle East / Asia / Latin America / Central Europe / Eastern Europe
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 338.91 G000 COX Record No: H021986)

3 Douthwaite, B.; Alvarez, S.; Cook, S.; Davies, R.; George, Pamela; Howell, J.; Mackay, R.; Rubiano, J. 2007. Participatory impact pathways analysis: a practical application of program theory in research-for-development. Canadian Journal of Program Evaluation, 22(2):127-159.
Food security ; Poverty ; Research projects ; Development projects ; Stakeholders ; Institutions ; Impact assessment ; Models ; Water productivity
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H044703)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H044703.pdf
(1.14 MB)
The Challenge Program on Water and Food pursues food security and poverty alleviation through the efforts of some 50 researchfor-evelopment projects. These involve almost 200 organizations working in nine river basins around the world. An approach was developed to enhance the developmental impact of the program through better impact assessment, to provide a framework for monitoring and evaluation, to permit stakeholders to derive strategic and programmatic lessons for future initiatives, and to provide information that can be used to inform public awareness efforts. The approach makes explicit a project’s program theory by describing its impact pathways in terms of a logic model and network maps. A narrative combines the logic model and the network maps into a single explanatory account and adds to overall plausibility by explaining the steps in the logic model and the key risks and assumptions. Participatory Impact Pathways Analysis is based on concepts related to program theory drawn from the fi elds of evaluation, organizational learning, and social network analysis.

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