Impact Evaluation of the Community Peace Building and Resilience to Crises and Fragility Project in Northeast Nigeria.

This project seeks to provide young people with an opportunity to overcome barriers to their effective participation in society, by creating the conditions where youth in Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe States (BAY States) have greater access to policy-making at local and national levels and where they are strengthened to better demand accountability for conflict-related human rights violations, such as CRSV, and to participate meaningfully in local and national peace and reconciliation processes, such as platforms to advance the Women Peace and Security, or the Youth Peace and Security, agendas. The Project will give young people aged 18 to 29 from the BAY States the opportunity to organize themselves into clubs from which they can initiate and partake in meaningful advocacy and civic action.

The overall aim of the Project is to ensure that Nigerian youth, and in particular survivors of the conflict in Northeastern Nigeria, participate in a meaningful and structured way, at local and national levels, in conflict prevention, the protection of civilians, peacebuilding, mediation & conflict resolution efforts, actively promoting the rights of the most vulnerable in society, therefore supporting the attainment of SDG 16 on promoting just, peaceful and inclusive societies.

The intermediate outcomes of the Project are that Nigerian youth in the BAY States:

  1. Have strengthened networks, capacities, and skills to effectively advocate for changes in policies, laws, and programmes affecting them;
  2. Have opportunities to participate in organized and sustained dialogues with State and national authorities, service providers, and the wider civil society ecosystem to share information and good practice, and to influence policy and practice around governance, security, and peacebuilding; and
  3. Have improved recognition of their human rights and are supported to more safely take a leading role in community reconciliation and conflict prevention.

R-DATS’ roles and responsibilities

R-DATS was contracted by the Dr. Denis Mukwege Foundation (MF) to assist in conducting the impact evaluation for the Project, including baseline and endline studies at the start and close of the Project respectively. This includes:

  • Supporting the impact evaluation designs including methods and data collection development.
  • Providing quality baseline, midline and endline data (quantitative and qualitative) – including findings that are site-specific (per State) and thematic-specific (Democratic Governance, Peacebuilding, and Transitional Justice) – to respond to the indicators in the Project’s logical framework / M&E framework.
  • Detailing findings in a final evaluation report

OVERVIEW

Partner:
Dr. Denis Mukwege Foundation

Sector:
Peace Building

Themes:
Inclusive Policy-Making, GBV, Peace and Security, Advocacy and Civic Action, Transitional Justice and Democratic Governance.

Country:
Nigeria

Study type/method:
Mixed-method research (quantitative research and qualitative research)

Implementation period:
2021-2023

Sample Size:
152 Youth surveys, 30 KIIs at each evaluation round

Implementation status:
Completed

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