working paper

Reshaping Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning for Locally Led Adaptation

Tamara Coger Sarah Corry Robbie Gregorowski
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1. Conventional MEL Does Not Support LLA Goals

Locally led adaptation recognizes that people closest to the effects of climate change, especially those facing structural marginalization, require the financing and decision-making power to ensure that adaptation investments reflect their priorities. It entails investing in solutions whereby local actors have the agency to make and influence these investment decisions and wield the innovation, flexibility, knowledge, and sense of urgency required to confront the crises of climate change and socioeconomic injustice (Conde et al. 2005).

Locally led adaptation is an emerging priority of some governments, bilateral and multilateral donors, and other institutions. Examples include programs such as the Least Developed Country (LDC) Initiative for Effective Adaptation and Resilience, County Climate Change Funds in Kenya, Enhancing Direct Access programs within funds like the Adaptation Fund and the Green Climate Fund, and localization movements in the humanitarian and development sectors (LIFE-AR 2019; Crick et al. 2019; GCF 2019; Adaptation Fund 2020a). Institutions from grassroots networks to international nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and funders are calling for the systemic changes required to channel more finance for adaptation to the local level and increase the agency and decision-making authority of local-level actors. In support of these efforts, principles for LLA have been established, and research and guidance are emerging to create enabling environments for LLA.

As adaptation and climate-resilient development investments aim to support local leadership, the process of designing, monitoring, and learning from these efforts must also support local leadership. Locally led adaptation is an approach that challenges some of the underlying assumptions and structures prevalent in international development, emphasizing that to be effective, local actors most directly impacted by climate change must drive the adaptation investments that affect them. This paper defines MEL and LLA terminology as described in Box 1.

Box 1 | MEL and LLA Definitions

Definitions

Monitoring – Continuous assessment to provide stakeholders with timely, detailed information on the progress of an intervention. Monitoring seeks to support near real-time learning as part of a wider approach to flexible and adaptive management.

Evaluation – The process of understanding the results of an activity, policy, program, or institution. Useful and robust evaluation should inform both accountability and learning depending on the emphasis of the evaluation questions.

Learning – Understanding, by an intervention’s stakeholders, of what works, in what contexts, for whom, and why. Learning should be iterative and ongoing, support direct and rapid course correction, and enhance the capacities, particularly the adaptive capacity, of all stakeholders.

Local – May refer to the household, business, community, municipal, district, or province level as applicable to the context and requirements of a given adaptation intervention.

Local actors – Stakeholders of an adaptation intervention or their accountable representatives at the appropriate subnational level; refers to individuals or groups from the whole of society, including the subnational government, local enterprises, civil society, and community-based organizations, as well as households and individuals (Soanes et al. 2020).

Locally led adaptation – Characterized by local people and their communities having individual and collective agency over their adaptation priorities and how adaptation takes place (Soanes et al. 2020).

Agency – Individual or collective power to make decisions and take actions regarding one’s own current and future situations and experiences (Cole 2020).

Several shortcomings of common MEL approaches remain that must be addressed to support LLA. MEL that prioritizes upward accountability can reinforce asymmetrical power relations between donors and local actors (Ramasobana et al. 2020). Such requirements of upward accountability often create structures that do not support the learning and adaptive management essential to locally led adaptation (Spearman and McGray 2011). Restricted interpretations of MEL lead to problematic practices, such as a tendency to prioritize products and outputs over the process, and to underestimate the relevance of local knowledge and experience. This risks a process that disempowers or devalues local actors and is not critical of who is affected by the MEL process and how (Pauw et al. 2020; Christiansen et al. 2018; Holzapfel 2016). If MEL systems are not designed to create value and ownership for local partners, they risk being extractive and disrespectful of local actors’ time and knowledge (McCreless 2015; CARE 2014). Institutional standards and requirements for MEL often prioritize upward accountability, creating a structure that does not support learning and adaptive management essential to locally led adaptation (Spearman and McGray 2011). These examples of MEL practices and approaches not only fail to support local actors but also undermine the goals of donors and intermediaries to support local priorities.

MEL is a social undertaking. It is applied to social challenges, and it can reinforce or confront societal values and social dynamics such as power and legitimacy. If not approached with the intention to support LLA, MEL practices may conflict with the objectives of locally led adaptation. Traditional MEL is not neutral in its approach to knowledge creation or dissemination. The evidence and knowledge generated in contexts of adaptation are valuable, but communities affected by adaptation interventions do not always experience this value. The theories of change and indicators guiding MEL do not often reflect local input, let alone local ownership. MEL tends to rely on external experts rather than supporting local capacity to implement MEL. These outputs and inputs of the MEL process also have socioeconomic, political, and environmental implications and are therefore political resources with financial consequences (Chilisa et al. 2016; Frehiwot 2019; Kawakami et al. 2008).

While many conventional MEL approaches and practices may not align with the principles of LLA, the generalized MEL cycle presents important opportunities to support LLA. MEL involves power, decision-making, trust, and communication among participants. These features serve as entry points to support locally led adaptation, including through collaborative, locally led decision-making, integration of social and gender equity considerations, building trust, social capital and local ownership, and evidence and learning about LLA. MEL that leverages these opportunities is more likely to support effective, equitable LLA, including by grounding the design of adaptation in local realities, generating more complete evidence, and mitigating climatic and programmatic risk through iterative learning and adaptive management (Faulkner et al. 2015).

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