Literature DB >> 30344335

Participation Denied: The Professional Boundaries of Monitoring and Evaluation in International Development.

Rebecca Warne Peters1.   

Abstract

Monitoring and evaluation (M&E) of international development programming is expected to produce "evidence-based" insight for both policy and practice. While supportive of evidence-based decision making, critics of contemporary M&E practice charge that it reflects the development industry's deepening audit culture, causing deleterious effects. I offer the example of a democratization program in postwar Angola to examine how the design and conduct of M&E in this case reinforced social boundaries and hierarchies of power among the program's own staff members. These professional staff hierarchies effectively barred ground-level evidence noted by implementation agents from being incorporated into the program's formal knowledge base. The case demonstrates that monitoring and evaluation procedures within development programs, and perhaps in other bureaucracies, must be examined for their social uses and effects among practitioners. These effects not only weaken the production of actionable knowledge for development but, by reinforcing social inequalities within the very industry tasked to combat them, also structurally threaten the endeavor.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Monitoring and Evaluation; international development; international non-governmental organizations; local staff; program implementation

Year:  2016        PMID: 30344335      PMCID: PMC6193497          DOI: 10.17730/1938-3525-75.4.315

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Organ        ISSN: 0018-7259


  2 in total

1.  Local in Practice: Professional Distinctions in Angolan Development Work.

Authors:  Rebecca Warne Peters
Journal:  Am Anthropol       Date:  2016-07-19

2.  Development Mobilities: Identity and Authority in an Angolan Development Programme.

Authors:  Rebecca Warne Peters
Journal:  J Ethn Migr Stud       Date:  2012-09-20
  2 in total

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