Assessing The Policy Outputs Environment for Effective Programming
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Assessing The Policy Outputs Environment for Effective Programming
Mohammed M Tumala (MEMS)Theresa Effa Kaka (ENHANSE) Chinelo Ezeobi (COMPASS)
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Objective of Presentation
Share with participants the PES process as a Monitoring Tool used by some USAID projects in Nigeria
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PES as a Monitoring Tool
1. Provides a MEASURE of “perceived” overall status of the policy/resources environment in the country/state as it concerns programs • When observed over time may indicate effectiveness of
existing system strengthening programs2. Provides a Measure of “perceived” changes in the
policy/resources environment between two time periods This will indicate direction of change in the environment
3. Identify weak/strong areas of policy/program resources Vital for programmatic decisions
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Steps in Conducting PES
1. Adapting the PES Questionnaire to the program area
2. Selection of Respondents to the PES Questionnaire
3. Adopting a methodology and administer the questionnaire
4. Data entry and Analysis5. Writing of process Report
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1. Questionnaire:Supportive Policy/Resources Environment
Political support and commitment including supportive national/state policies, laws and plans;
Existence of Policies that meet client’s expressed needs Operational policies that promote access, demand and
quality, all the way down to the service level; Adequate financial, infrastructure and human resources Active private sector/CSOs participation Programs that are designed and implemented according to
policies.
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Questionnaire Ctd:Classification of Policy Output & Resource Areas
i. Political Support for programsii. Policy Formulation/Implementationiii. Organizational Structureiv. Legal and Regulatory Environmentv. Program Resourcesvi. Program Component Implementedvii. Evaluation and Research in the program
area
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Questionnaire Ctd:i. Political Support for Programs
This looks at level of support/opinion of groups on specific program area and supporting policies:
High Level political Leadership The public Political parties Development plans Religious organizations Major traditional/community leaders
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Questionnaire Ctd:ii. Policy Formulation/Implementation
This looks at: Existence of policies/laws and programs to facilitate
provision of services Dissemination of existing policies at all levels
Adaptation of higher level policies at lower levels Existence of implementation guidelines or norms
and/or protocols of existing policies Effective implementation of existing policies NGOs, community and religious leaders involvement
in Policy dialogue
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Questionnaire Ctd:iii. Organizational Structure
Should Include: Existence of a coordinating body that engages CSOs, FBOs, and
Communities Existence of a department/agency with high level placement in
government Existence of Responsible officers on full time responsible for programs Formal involvement NGOs/FBOs in planning and organizational
structure deliberations Inclusion of Community and Religious leaders in planning organizational
structure deliberations The formal involvement of the private sector in planning organizational
structure policy deliberations Formation of management committees that include CSOs
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Questionnaire Ctd:iv. Legal and Regulatory Environment
Existence of norms and standards for service provision
Adaptation of norms and standards for the provision of service at all levels of service
Existence of Mechanisms to enforce compliance with norms and standards to ensure quality of service provided
Existence of Mechanisms to enforce the provisions of existing laws
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Questionnaire Ctd:v. Program Resources
Funding from public sector sources Funding from external sources Financial capabilities of communities/CSOs for
service provision Awareness and capacities of community/religious
leaders, and CSOs Resource availability to families/individuals to provide
service
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Questionnaire Ctd:vi. Program Components implemented
This will depend on the type of program. OVC example: Provision and high coverage of all services that
meet the needs of OVC Food & Nutrition Education Health Psychosocial Support & Participation Economic Empowerment/IGA Legal Protection Shelter
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Questionnaire Ctd:vii. Evaluation and Research
Existence of systems for regular/adequate collection of statistics
Existence of systems to monitor secondary data sources (surveys, censuses, local studies, etc.)
Existence of systems to bring assessment/evaluation and research results to policymakers’
Undertaking of Special studies Use of evaluation and research data for decision
making
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2. Selection of Respondents
Respondents are selected based on perceived knowledge and Involvement in the program area from a wide range of stakeholders: Government Program managers in ministries and agencies Donor agencies and Program managers in the private sector Program managers of international NGOs Representatives of local NGOs University-based researchers, academicians Representatives from CSOs/women’s groups
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Adopt a Methodology and Administer the QuestionnaireThere are mainly two ways Postage:
Respondents receive the questionnaire with adequate instructions on the purpose and scoring. Respondents return completed questionnaires
Workshop: Respondents are Invited to a workshop, receive briefing on
purpose, use and scoring. Individually score the items An FGD may be conducted around the average scores to
provide narratives to the observed scores
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Administer the Questionnaire
Whichever method Used, Participants Individually Score Items they have knowledge on.
Individuals may differ in their scores, but NO guessing the scores
There is a flexible ranking used for scores e.g:
4 means a very strong or a better or more satisfactory rating; 3 means strong, 2 means somewhat strong/somewhat weak (mid-point), 1 means weak, and 0 means very weak or non existent.
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4. Data Capture & Analysis
The target for Data capture is to find averages for Items and Policy Output Categories
An Excel Template is used. Modified alongside the questionnaire
Components Average Score
2006 2007Political supportPolicy formulationOrganizational StructureLegal/regulationsResourcesPrograms componentsEvaluation and Research
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Use of PES in Nigeria
The Policy Project used the PES in 2000 to assess the policy environment as it concerned Reproductive Health in Nigeria (FP, SM, ARH) The PES tool was adopted to the Nigerian situation The outputs informed the national population policy review
In 2002 the FMOH (CDPA) with TA from Policy Project undertook a PES survey (FP, SM, ARH)
COMPASS uses the PES in 5 states; Lagos, Nasarawa, Kano, Bauchi & FCT (BE, RH, CS)to monitor changes at the state level
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Steps in Conducting PES
a. Define “Policy”It is important to provide a definition of
policy before PES is carried out.The policy project defined policy as: “…
actions, customs, laws or regulations by governments or other social/civic groups that directly or indirectly, explicitly or implicitly affect use/quality of services/activities” for ………..
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Use of PES Outputs
Improve Program planning or implementation for OVC services in the state
Advocate for Increased funding of OVC services in the state
Inform policy reforms/formulation or review in the state
Guide Managers of Public and Private Sector Institutions
Provide NGOs with tools to advocate for increased use of quality services