working paper

Reshaping Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning for Locally Led Adaptation

Tamara Coger Sarah Corry Robbie Gregorowski
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Introduction

As a process involving power and decision-making, monitoring, evaluation, and learning (MEL) can either perpetuate structural inequity or actively work against it (Emerson 2020). Conventional MEL risks further entrenching the inequities that make certain populations disproportionately vulnerable to climate change. However, there is a paucity of documented experience that addresses the entire cycle of adaptation MEL in a way that intentionally redresses power imbalances between donors and local partners, addresses biases in the knowledge and values that are privileged, and promotes downward accountability to local actors.

This paper discusses the role of MEL in encouraging equitable distribution of resources and agency through locally led adaptation (LLA). It provides an assessment of approaches and practices throughout the MEL cycle that help balance power and accountability, and discusses the advantages and limitations of these practices.

The MEL approaches and practices outlined in this paper are targeted primarily to donor and intermediary institutions and individuals involved in designing or delivering MEL in the context of locally led adaptation or where local ownership is a development priority. Since these groups currently have the power to direct resources to MEL, and influence MEL design and outcomes, they have a critical role in leveraging MEL to support LLA. Local actors, however, are facing the very risks LLA interventions seek to address, and are therefore most directly affected by MEL practices and approaches. As funders and implementers of climate adaptation interventions invest in and prioritize locally led adaptation, assessment of the implications of MEL for LLA can inform approaches and practices that build social capital and encourage equitable distribution of power.

The conclusions and recommendations of this paper are intended to provide practical suggestions for donor and intermediary institutions and MEL practitioners to better support locally led adaptation through MEL, and fundamentally rethink the role of MEL to support their climate resilience and social justice objectives. The advancements in MEL discussed in this paper represent an evolution of good practice in the interest of more effective and equitable adaptation outcomes.

The paper draws attention to the critical role of MEL in supporting locally led adaptation and offers good practices and lessons learned from relevant literature and practice. Section 2 presents key considerations for supporting locally led adaptation that are relevant throughout the MEL cycle, using a set of principles for LLA that were developed for the Global Commission on Adaptation as a conceptual framework. Section 3 walks through each phase of the MEL cycle and assesses specific approaches, methods, and tools that align with the principles of locally led adaptation. This assessment is based on the relevant bodies of research and practice on adaptation MEL, community-based adaptation, participatory MEL, and decolonization of MEL, as well as a set of case studies and consultations with stakeholders of MEL for locally led adaptation. Section 4 synthesizes the key findings from this assessment and presents conclusions and recommendations for MEL to better support and enable locally led adaptation.

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