Gender-Sensitive Monitoring and Evaluation
Gender-Sensitive Monitoring and Evaluation
Key Actions
Design humanitarian performance monitoring systems in a way that tracks distinctions between
results for girls, boys, women and men. This entails looking at different approaches for monitoring
systems at different levels, cluster/sector, programme, project and cross-sectoral.
Ensure that monitoring indicators for high-frequency partner reporting are sex-disaggregated
wherever possible. This high-frequency monitoring against 2-3 indicators per sector through partner
reporting is a key element of UNICEF’s Humanitarian Performance Monitoring approach to allow rough
coverage estimates on key result areas. This is equally relevant for UNICEF programmes and as a support
to cluster performance monitoring. Given the constraints of high-frequency data collection in
humanitarian contexts, many of these indicators will be based on extrapolations where sex-
disaggregation is not possible; for example, population with access to safe water will be calculated in
part using agreed standards on amount of water per person and data on water treatment materials
distributed. However, wherever data is collected through records or counts of individual people, sex-
disaggregation is possible and critical. The UNICEF Humanitarian Performance Monitoring Toolkit:
Indicator Guide provides specific detail on recommended indicators. These indicators will be identified
ideally at the time of preparing the humanitarian Appeal documents which is important in getting
agreement with key partners. For UNICEF NGO partners, the reporting against priority indicators can be
reinforced in Programme Cooperation Agreements. As a situation stabilizes, and with a shift towards
lower frequency monitoring, it will be possible to change reporting to allow sex-disaggregation on more
indicators.
Ensure that the above coverage data is complemented by systematic field monitoring to get feedback
on quality of programming on the ground and give voice to affected populations. This is a second key
element of UNICEF Humanitarian Performance Monitoring approach. Field monitoring must be
designed following standard guidance on gender-sensitive data collection and analysis to providean
examination of gender differences and the underlying causes of these (see Steps 2 and 3 above). Field
monitoring makes it possible to systematically probe gender differences in:
• participation by girls, boys, women and men;
• access to services, resources and activities;
• progress in addressing priority humanitarian needs; and
• the positive and/or negative impacts and benefits of an intervention on girls, boys, women and
men.
Advocate that partners adopt gender-sensitive data collection in their own performance monitoring
systems at project level and services (e.g. primary health care centres, feeding programmes, child
friendly spaces). This should include:
collecting sex- and age- disaggregated data on beneficiaries of services;
and tracking some key process indicators that contribute to gender-sensitive results; for
example, levels of participation by girls, boys, women and men as project or activity
coordinators, facilitators, trainers or trainees, and members of community-level committees,
etc.).
Ensure that any larger outcome level surveys are designed according to standard guidance on gender-
sensitive data collection and analysis (see Steps 2 and 3 above). Given the high cost and cross-sector
relevance of these types of surveys, they are usually undertaken at Inter-Agency level using approaches
such as adapted MICS or follow-up needs assessments surveys. These are critical opportunities to get
more solid statistical data on gender differences in programme results.
Undertake periodic focused gender analyses in order to interpret data from various monitoring systems,
and use results to inform sector/programme/project-level revision (See Step 3 on Gender Analysis)
Ensure that monitoring systems align with gender-sensitive programme standards and benchmarks, as
found in SPHERE and INEE.
Design evaluations in a way that assess distinctions between results for girls, boys, women and men.
Ensure that evaluation efforts are gender-sensitive, consultative and participatory.
Involve girls, boys, women and men of all ages in the provision
See UNICEF’s How to design
of information, as applicable, to a program or project. Also
and manage Equity-focused
consider involving representatives of community-based
evaluations, for more guidance in
organizations involved in gender issues to participate in in- conducting evaluations that are
country reference groups. sensitive to gender, as well as other
sources of inequity.
Routinely ask different groups to identify their distinct needs
and priorities and the extent to which a project or programme is
meeting them.
In projects involving gender-sensitive topics or lines of questioning (e.g., GBV, family planning), take
appropriate measures to ensure that women and girls feel at ease to share their views freely and
openly.
Encourage the participation of girls, boys, women and men in evaluations as individuals or in groups
including as: implementing partner representatives; project or activity coordinators; facilitators and
animators; trainers or trainees; program or project committees, and; beneficiaries.
Include women and men on evaluation teams.
Ensure that gender analysis and sex-disaggregated data are a routine part of reporting mechanisms.
Ensure that progress reports, final reports and programme evaluations include information on the
following:
• presentation of sex- and age-disaggregated data and results of gender analysis
• description of results including the impact of the programme on girls, boys, women and men, noting
similarities and differences
• changes in access, or gender equality gaps
• information as to progress towards and/or achievement of gender equality objectives and outcomes.
Ask questions that help determine any Example: In Pakistan, IDP camps shelters were constructed in
distinct risks, needs and priorities of the absence of community consultations. UNICEF protection
different population groups, and identify officers visiting the camps noted that women and girls were
any gender-based discrimination or key nowhere to be seen. Upon further investigation, they discovered
barriers to access. that the IDPs were from Purdah communities, where women and
girls faced restrictions on contact with men outside their
immediate family. As a result, women and girls were confined to
Be prepared to ask different questions
tents and were not accessing any services.
in different ways to different population
groups, taking into consideration age, In response, UNICEF consulted with male and female
gender and social norms, as well as community members (separately and together) in order to come
cultural context in order to gain desired up with a way to address the cultural restrictions on mobility
insight. faced by women and girls. They agreed to construct female-only
spaces where women and girls could walk around freely and
Be aware of power relations and ensure access basic services.
to get a diversity of viewpoints, moving
beyond community leaders to gather information directly from community representatives, including of
disadvantaged groups.
Factor in the time, day and location of meetings when scheduling consultations with communities to
ensure that different population groups can participate.
Ensure that all processes of consultation with affected populations are designed and carried out safely
and according to ethical standards.