The UNICEF Multi-Country Programme CP outcome for 2018-2022 is for children in the Pacific to be increasingly protected from violence and abuse, which is supported by three outputs:
1. Governments have strengthened child protection institutional frameworks.
2. Government and other service providers (non-governmental agencies) have enhanced capacities to provide child protection services which prevent and respond to violence and abuse.
3. Caregivers, families and communities have increased knowledge and skills to eliminate harmful practices and better protect children from violence and abuse.
To ensure the CP Programme is well-designed, operationally effective, and the right mechanisms are in place for a robust monitoring and evaluation of outcomes and results in the next cycle, this evaluability assessment takes stock of the necessary conditions for a successful evaluation and get agreement around its scope and framing questions. Furthermore, the evaluability assessment will also aim to understand the starting point of key actions and outcomes against which progress will be measured in this new phase of the programme. The recommendations of this evaluability assessment aim to improve the eventual evaluation of the CP Programme as well as the design, planning, and monitoring of the UNICEF Pacific CP programme itself.
Year Published | |
Type | |
Joint | No |
Partner/s | N/A |
Consultant name | Tristi Nichols |
Agency Focal Point | Ali Safarnejad |
Focal Point Email | asafarnejad@unicef.org |
Managed by Independent Evaluation Office | No |
Geographic Scope | Country |
Country/ies |