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Evaluating the long-term impact of shelter programmes

Evaluating the long-term impact of shelter programmes. Ian Pearce, Habitat for Humanity Great Britain Victoria Batchelor, Arup International Development. Mission Statement.

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Evaluating the long-term impact of shelter programmes

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  1. Evaluating the long-term impact of shelter programmes Ian Pearce, Habitat for Humanity Great Britain Victoria Batchelor, Arup International Development

  2. Mission Statement • Habitat for Humanity works in partnership with God and people everywhere, from all walks of life, to develop communities with people in need by building and renovating houses so that there are decent houses in decent communities in which every person can experience God’s love and can live and grow into all that God intends.

  3. Mission Principles Demonstrate the love and teachings of Jesus Christ Advocate on behalf of those in need of decent shelter Focus on shelter by building and renovating simple, decent, affordable houses Engage broad community through inclusive leadership and diverse partnerships Promote dignity through full partnership with Habitat homeowners and future home partners Promote transformational and sustainable community development

  4. Why housing?

  5. Some key questions What is “good” development? How do we know that, in fact, we are doing what we intend to do? How do we measure the impact of our work? What are the reference points – internal and external? How do we validate our choices as a development organisation? 5

  6. Habitat’s Tsunami Disaster Response Projects Habitat’s effort served more than 25,000 families in four countries Tested the organization’s systems, processes and policies with impact on organizational development and growth.

  7. Assessment tools

  8. A partner with: Global reputation Technical expertise Development oriented Local presence An assessment tool with: Instrument validity Objective and replicable Links infrastructure with poverty reduction and sustainability Possibility of comparing projects across contexts and across sectors Habitat’s need

  9. Geographical overlap Arup’s ownership structure Arup have a long-term relationship with HFH Arup’s International Development group operates on a not for profit basis Why Arup?

  10. A unique collaboration between Engineers Against Poverty and Arup to support the integrated appraisal of poverty reduction and sustainability performance of housing and infrastructure programmes Aspire

  11. Habitat’s Tsunami Disaster Response Projects What was the impact of Habitat for Humanity’s tsunami response shelter program on sustainability of communities and sustainability of livelihoods?

  12. Literature Review Comparative Analysis Project Life Cycle Analysis Conceptual Framework Indicator development Prototype software Testing Aspire : Research

  13. Literature Review Comparative Analysis Project Life Cycle Analysis Conceptual Framework Indicator development Prototype software Testing Aspire : Concept Institutions Economics

  14. Aspire : Development best case worst case

  15. Aspire : Testing Housing, Belgian Red Cross, Sri Lanka School and health facility, UNOPS, Sri Lanka Gautrain, South Africa Source: Belgian Red Cross Source: UNOPS Source: Maji Na Ufanisi/Arup Source: PIDG WATSAN, Maji Na Ufanisi, Kenya Kindergarten, Sabre Trust, Ghana Irrigation Pilot Project, PIDG, Zambia

  16. Define boundaries and objectives Identify stakeholders Review list of sub-themes Policy and regulatory framework Data collection Data entry Initial outputs Feedback to stakeholders Review based on feedback Final outputs Aspire: Process

  17. 1. Define boundaries • Geographical: four countries • Scale: programme level • Time: five years (2005-2010)

  18. 2. Identify stakeholders • HFH National Offices • HFH International • ‘Home-partners’ • Volunteers • Partner NGOs • Local government • Disaster Response Agencies • Donors

  19. 3. Review of indicators • Should any be excluded? • drylands / forests • carbon pricing • Where will we get the information?

  20. 4. Policy and regulatory framework • Local regulations • National regulations • International standards • Building codes • Planning requirements • Disaster response policies • Eligibility criteria

  21. 5. Data collection • Desktop review/research • Community workshops

  22. 5. Data collection • Desktop review/research • Community workshops • Household interviews

  23. 5. Data collection • Desktop review/research • Community workshops • Household interviews • Direct observation

  24. 5. Data collection • Desktop review/research • Community workshops • Household interviews • Direct observation • Stakeholder interviews

  25. 6. Data entry

  26. 7-9. Initial outputs, feedback and review “best case” “worst case” average output

  27. 10. Final outputs and reporting

  28. Outcomes of the tsunami-response assessment Institutions • Strong in all sections Environment • Strong in materials and land • Weak in energy Economics • Strong in equity, macro and viability Society • Strong in population, culture and stakeholders

  29. Population Vulnerable groups Culture Socio-cultural identity Vulnerability Physical exposure Strengths

  30. Water Drainage systems Energy Energy sources Livelihoods Access to finance Health Drainage Vulnerability Location Climate change resilience Access to livelihoods and finance Opportunities

  31. Relevance to Haiti • Relates to the Paul Collier agenda – Haiti as a fragile state • ASPIRE assesses the impact of shelter – not just the shelter itself • ASPIRE can be used throughout programme development, not just at the end

  32. Any questions? For more information: www.habitatforhumanity.org.uk www.arup.com/internationaldevelopment www.oasys-software.com/products/sustainability/aspire

  33. Exercise 1: Community structure

  34. Exercise 2: Timeline

  35. Exercise 3: Mapping

  36. Exercise 4: Livelihoods

  37. Exercise 5: Assets

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