Evaluating International Humanitarian Action: Reflections from Practitioners

Author(s)
Wood, A., Apthorpe, R. and J. Borton (eds.)
Publication language
English
Date published
01 Jan 2001
Publisher
London: Zed Press
Type
Books
Keywords
Conflict, violence & peace, Evaluation-related
Organisations
ALNAP

Summary

With the number of violent conflicts within countries increasing all the time, as well as other forms of natural and man-made complex emergencies, humanitarian intervention has become a much more frequent form of providing assistance. There has also been a corresponding rise in the need to evaluate the effectiveness of such interventions. In this volume, ALNAP has compiled for the first time an examination of the experiences of, and lessons learned by, those practically engaged in humanitarian programme evaluations.
The case studies included in this volume are drawn from four continents, including Central Asia and the Balkans, and they embrace the different kinds of humanitarian emergency that have afflicted so many people during the past decade. The authors address the context in which evaluations of humanitarian assistance take place; the actual process of evaluations; and how such evaluations might be better undertaken in future.

The pioneering study is likely to be of great practical value to agencies and individuals engaged in both the delivery of humanitarian assistance in complex emergencies and its evaluation.

This book is no longer available.