Using Theory of Change to Lever Change: Experience from the CGIAR

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Using ToC to lever change Boru Douthwaite STEPS/CDI Seminar, University of Sussex, 25 April, 2013

description

Presented by Boru Douthwaite, Principal Scientist on the CGIAR Research Program on Aquatic Agricultural Systems (AAS) at WorldFish. Working with staff and stakeholders to think through how research can bring about development outcomes can change how projects and partnerships are planned, implemented, monitored and evaluated to increase their likelihood of success. Experience from the CGIAR shows that realizing this potential depends on facilitation and timing more than theory and formats. This seminar examines the important dos and don’ts of using theory of change to foster change from experience from two CGIAR programs. Boru Douthwaite was previously the former Innovation and Impact Director at the Challenge Program on Water and Food and a Senior Scientist at CIAT, where he developed the Participatory Impact Pathways Analysis (PIPA) approach, which is used by the STEPS Centre’s projects. This seminar is being held jointly with the Centre for Development Impact.

Transcript of Using Theory of Change to Lever Change: Experience from the CGIAR

Page 1: Using Theory of Change to Lever Change: Experience from the CGIAR

Using ToC to lever

change

Boru Douthwaite

STEPS/CDI Seminar, University of Sussex, 25 April, 2013

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Impact pathways matter

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Mechanism

• Using Realistic Evaluation definition (Pawson and Tilley, 1997)

• The mechanism

– Make ‘theory in use’ explicit

– Reflect on its validity

– Narrow gap with ‘espoused theory’ (Argyris & Schön 1974)

– Start to change mental models

Outcome

Mechanism

Intervention Triggers

Context

Intervention triggers a mechanism to produce impact in a context

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The mechanism through a systems

perspective

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Intervention 1: Innovation Histories

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Participatory Innovation Histories

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Experience with Innovation Histories

• Worked well

– Researcher learning

– Depth of insight

– Theory building

– Triggers other mechanisms

• Didn’t work so well

– Changing practice

– Shared learning

• Insight

– Politics

– Rear view mirror smaller than windscreen

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CPWF’s need for ex-ante impact

assessment

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Intervention 2: PIPA

• Innovation histories written from the future • Synthesis of concepts and tools from:

– Program Evaluation Renger and Titcomb (2002) – problem trees

Chen (2005) – program theory

Mayne (2004) - performance stories

Douthwaite et al. (2003 and 2007) – impact pathway evaluation in integrated weed management in Northern Nigeria

– Innovation histories Douthwaite and Ashby, 2005

– Appreciative Inquiry Whitney and Trosten-Bloom, 2003

– Social network analysis Cross and Parker, 2004; Rick Davies

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Workshop

Road Map

1. Problem Tree

2. Outcomes Tree

3. Vision

6. Project impact pathways

4. "Now"

network map

What the project should helpachieve

Currentarrangement ofactors working onPH in Cambodia

Helps understand case rationaleand what needs to change

Pro

ble

m a

naly

sis

Inte

gra

tion

5. Key changes required

to achieve Vision

Sta

kehold

er

analy

sis

The changes the project can help achieve, who will change andproject strategies to bring changes about

Introduction to new Project (incl. Learning Alliance

Concept), Introductions, Expectations

Discussion of how a Learning Alliance might work

PIPA Process to surface and communicate

project impact pathways in Vietnam

Next Steps

Workshop Evaluation

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Constructing a Problem

Tree

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Drawing

Network Maps of

who is funding,

carrying out the

research,

scaling-out and

scaling-up

project outputs

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Adding ‘Power

Towers’ to

show differing

influence of

actors

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Developing a Scaling Strategy (Table 2)

Describe the most

important

differences between

the two networks

Why is the change

important to

achieve the vision?

What are the

project’s strategies

for achieving the

change?

Exercise

6a

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Outcome Logic Model from Workshop

Outputs

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Reflection on PIPA

• What works well

– Space for reflection

– Provides a language, set of concepts to link research to

impact

– Built a contending coalition

Happy synchronicity

• What didn’t work so well

– Making OLMs a contract requirement

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It is all about the timing …

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Next Steps

• Revive PIPA

– Web site

– Community of practice

• Measuring the impacts of PIPA

• In CGIAR Research Program on Aquatic Agricultural Systems

– PIPA adapted

• In STEPS?

• STEPS/CDI – AAS Collaboration?