My interests include food systems, support for culinary enjoyment rather than turning meals into formulae, global health enhancement, policy and strategy and everyone who deprecates reductive, reactive actions.
My contributions
Neutrality-impartiality-independence. At which stage of the evaluation is each concept important?
DiscussionRacism in the field of evaluation
DiscussionThe farmer as a key participant of M&E: lessons and experiences from Participatory M&E systems
DiscussionUsing synthesis and meta-analysis to make the most of evaluative evidence: what is your experience?
DiscussionRecurring errors in public policies and major projects: contributions and solutions from evaluation
DiscussionIs this really an output? Addressing terminology differences between evaluators and project managers
Discussion
Lal - Manavado
Consultant Independent analyst/synthesistGreetings!
I read with some interest the original e-mail on this topic and the first responses. However, I am a little puzzled: it is obvious that any evaluation can only be undertaken relative to a certain given objective. For me, the only justifiable objective of an evaluation is to ascertain whether a project, programme, etc could or had achieved its intended purpose towards the target group. Such a group may be a group of strategists, designers of operation or field work.
As far as I can see, it is difficult to understand how such an objective - reaching the target population - may be visualized. Without such an anchor, the visualizations would be left adrift like a ship with engine failure in a stormy sea.
Cheers!
Lal Manavado.