WISE Proposal All in One
WISE Proposal All in One
WISE Proposal All in One
For
More specifically, women are mostly the victims of such sensitivities. According to the
Lancet report (2020), although there has not been any gender analysis of the pandemic by any
government of health organization or any estimates of potential victims in preparedness phases,
in times when social isolation and distancing practices are being applied, there are increased
risks of violence against women, their abuse, exploitation and neglect. Past evidences inform us
that diseases outbreak affected men and women differently in their day-to-day activities (Malik,
& Naeem, 2020).
The socio-economic impact assessment of COVID – 19 has been drafted by the United
Nations (UN) in Ethiopia in the spirit of ‘One UN’. Our next goal is to develop substantive
proposals on socio economic response and recovery, which are expected to be ready very soon.
This assessment leaves little room for doubt that the impact on Ethiopia is already serious and
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could, depending on conditions, become severe. It urges a policy response that puts people and
their rights at the centre, especially those most impacted and left behind (Josephson,2021; Ozili,
2020).
Of the people most at risk, Women are at the center of any disease outbreak - and
outbreaks affect women and men differently. Health emergencies disproportionately affect
women and girls in several ways including access to health care services (e.g., SRH and HIV
services), livelihood, food security, and protection. Pandemics, including COVID-19, compound
existing gender inequalities and vulnerabilities, increasing risks of abuse and a regression in
development gains for women and girls (Rafaeli & Hutchinson, 2020). In times of crisis such as
an outbreak, women and girls may be at higher risk, every COVID-19 response plan, and every
recovery package and budgeting of resources, needs to address the gender impacts of this
pandemic (Azcona et al.,2020).
Considering these rationales, the organization for Women in Self-Employment (WISE) is
an Ethiopian Civil Society Organization that was registered with the Ministry of Justice in
August 1997 and reregistered with the Charities and Societies Agency in 2009. As part of its
overall programme, and with a financial support from the European Union Civil Society Fund
WISE is implementing a project entitled ENHANCE: Enhancement of Vulnerable Households’
Resilience Against COVID-19, contract ref. FED/2020/418-963 in the period November 18/2020
to November 17 2021. Thus, it is essential so as to evaluate the contribution of WISE to
strengthening accountability to key stakeholders of WISE with regard to performances in
programme implementation and the internal learning.
✓ Identify and assess outputs and outcomes of activities implemented as part of the
project “EUcsf3 project”.
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✓ Assess the extent possible the contribution of the activities to the overall objectives of
the project as well as to that of the mission of WISE
✓ Evaluate how and to what extent the approaches applied by the project contribute to
resilience against COVID 19 of vulnerable house holds
1.4. Scope of the evaluation
This evaluation should be based on a wider investigation of country contexts and specific
activity portfolios since WISE wants to maximize the relevance and learning potential of the
evaluation to contribute to the national COVID-19 preparedness and response efforts. This
places strong emphasis on the role of the inception phase for specifying the scope, in accordance
with the considerations outlined below.
Thematic focus - The project is financed by EU/CSF III the overall objective of which is
to increase the contribution of citizens and CSOs in the development and democratization
process of the country. Accordingly, important focus areas of this evaluation include:
➢ Capacity strengthening of WISE SACCO leaders and their team in nine sub cities of
Addis Ababa Putting women and girls at the center of economies will fundamentally
drive better and more sustainable development outcomes for all, support a more rapid
recovery, and place us back on a footing to achieve the sustainable development Goals.
➢ Support the informal economy with few protections against dismissal or for paid sick
leave and limited access to social protection. To earn a living depend on public space and
social interaction which are now being restricted to contain the spread of the pandemic.
➢ The chain of results - The project is primarily about “Enhancement of Vulnerable
Households’ Resilience Against COVID-19”. Thus, the evaluation will primarily check
the achievements of the high-level results and their indicators in the approved Logical
Framework Matrix (LogFrame) of the project. The same can be said for improved
participation/advocacy efforts. The evaluation will look for indications of broader
development outcomes where possible, but the assessment will primarily be based on the
work of WISE and Partners
Monitoring and Evaluation information for accountability and learning. The evaluation
will among others examine how results and monitoring are aligned with broader Overall
Objectives with reference to the indicators included in the Log frame of the project proposal.
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Geographic/Regional focus: The evaluation will as point of departure consider project
activities in Addis Ababa of seventy SACCOs from nine woredas.
Time frame: The evaluation is expected to cover the activities implemented by WISE
during the period from November 2020 to November 2021. This will allow focusing on activities
and results related to the specific project, and analysing the temporal aspects and their
implication for the potential achievement of results.
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2. Approaches and Methodology
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In-depth interviews will conduct with ENHANCE project coordinators in the
organization and SACCOs’ leaders from beneficiaries. The aim of interviewing, which mainly
focus on themes the core strategic agendas of the project, is to assess the overall activities of the
project.
Focus group discussion will be targeted the beneficiaries in 9 sub cities in order to have
comprehensive image about the project. In the discussion it will have 6 up to 8 discussants in
each FGDs. Totally, it is expected there will be 9 FGD groups
The study will use strategies, reports and other documents related with the project. The
data will be triangulate using a variety of methods. Besides, semi- structure questionnaires will
be administrated for the beneficiaries to collect data a phenomenon which is not easily observed
such as attitudes and self-concepts and that helps us to have representative data with limited
resources.
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coded and group into themes. Then, the responses group and describe thematically as
complementary evidence for the quantitative data. Items which were constructed for the
questionnaire will be analyzed with a statistical package of frequency and percentage.
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5. Criteria and timeline for judging proposals will be decided with WISE officials
6. Opportunities for clarification can be made if WISE need to have
Work Plan
No Evaluation phases Deliverables Responsible Location Timeline/unit
person days
1 Signing of contract 18 November 2021: Project WISE 1 day
coordinators Office
2 Writing inception Up to end 30 Consultant Home 10 days
report November 2021 based
3 Presenting and Up to end 30 Consultant WISE 1day
endorsement of the November 2021 Office
inception Report
4 Data Collection 30 November to mid- Consultant and Field work 15 days
15 December 2021 data collectors
5 Data analysis 15 December to end Evaluation Home 10 days
25 December 2021 Team based
6 Writing first draft 26 December to 28 Evaluation Home 2 days
December 2021 Team based
7 Submit Final report 29 December to end Consultant Home 2 days
30 December 2021 based
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References
Azcona, G., Bhatt, A., Encarnacion, J., Plazaola-Castaño, J., Seck, P., Staab, S., & Turquet, L.
(2020). From insights to action: Gender equality in the wake of COVID-19. United
Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women).
Cohen, L., Manion, L., & Morrison, K. (2017). Research methods in education. Routledge.
Gulseven, O., Al Harmoodi, F., Al Falasi, M., & ALshomali, I. (2020). How the COVID-19
pandemic will affect the UN sustainable development goals?. Available at SSRN
3592933.
Herbert, W., Seliger, H. W., Shohamy, E. G., & Shohamy, E. (1989). Second language research
methods. Oxford University Press.
Josephson, A., Kilic, T., & Michler, J. D. (2021). Socioeconomic impacts of COVID-19 in low-
income countries. Nature Human Behaviour, 5(5), 557-565.
Kothari, C. R. (2004). Research methodology: Methods and techniques. New Age International.
Malik, S., & Naeem, K. (2020). Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on Women: Health, livelihoods
& domestic violence.
Ozili, P. (2020). COVID-19 in Africa: socio-economic impact, policy response and
opportunities. International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy.
Rafaeli, T., & Hutchinson, G. (2020). The secondary impacts of COVID-19 on Women and Girls
in Sub-Saharan Africa.
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