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IFAD’s Gender and Targeting Webinar Series Purpose of the webinar series Webinar programme 29 April – Livelihoods and gender analysis 20 May – Targeting and gender strategies 17 June – Monitoring and impact indicators Other topics – Household
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Page 1: Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

IFAD’s Gender and Targeting Webinar Series

Purpose of the webinar series

Webinar programme• 29 April – Livelihoods and gender analysis• 20 May – Targeting and gender strategies • 17 June – Monitoring and impact indicators• Other topics – Household methodologies

Page 2: Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

StructureI. Targeting and gender

strategies in project cycleII. Elements of targeting strategy

and checklist *III. Elements of gender strategy

and checklist*IV. Implementation arrangements*V. Putting it all together *

* Opportunity for contributions

Page 3: Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

I. Where is T&G strategy formulation in the project cycle?

Identification

Design

Implementation and monitoring

Evaluation

I. Gender and livelihoods analysis

II. Targeting and gender

strategies and mechanisms

III. Operational measures, indicators, monitoring

IV. Evaluation and impact assessment

IFAD staff/ consultants

PMU staff/ consultants

Page 4: Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

Targeting and gender in project cycle

Page 5: Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

Targeting and gender process

Rural livelihoods

Project design + indicators

Gender strategyTargeting strategy

Project implementation + M&E

Project impact

Gender analysisSocio-economic analysis

Webinar 1

Webinar 2

Webinar 3

Target group profile

Page 6: Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

II. Elements of targeting strategy

Direct and self targeting

Empowering Enabling

Typology of target group • Resources, skills• Access to services• Livelihoods (in context of project)• Vulnerabilities• Coping mechanisms• Needs and priorities

Procedural, implementation and monitoring

Target group

Priority needs

Impact assessment and evaluation

Geographic targeting

Procedural, implementation and monitoring

Page 7: Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

Targeting checklist

Design featuresTarget group Definition, socio-economic analysis, likely interest

Geographic targeting

Remote areas, concentration of target group

Direct targeting Quotas, specific activities, ear-marked funds

Self targeting Value chains, non-farm enterprises, group operations,

Empowering Literacy classes, labour saving technologies

Enabling Land tenure legislation, staff development

Procedural Eligibility criteria, application procedures, child care

See examples

2.1 and 2.2

Page 8: Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

III. Elements of gender strategy

Economic empowerment• Access and control over resources • Participation in profitable activities • Access and control over benefits

Decision-making and representation• Within households • Savings and credit groups, micro-finance

institutions, producer organizations• Community bodies eg water user assocs

Equitable workload balance• Rural infrastructure and services• Labour-saving technologies• Equitable balance between

benefits/ remuneration

Page 9: Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

Gender checklist (adaptable to youth, indigenous peoples and others for social inclusion)

Design featuresTarget group Poverty and livelihoods from gender

perspectiveEconomic empowerment

Access and control over resourcesSkills and knowledge

Decision making and representation

Membership and leadership trainingQuotas

Equitable workload and sharing in benefits

Labour saving technologiesHousehold methodologies

See examples

2.3 and 2.4

Page 10: Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

IV. Implementation arrangements

Design featuresPMU staff Skills, composition, responsibilities, gender

specialist/focal point, trainingM&E Collection, analysis and reporting of sex-

disaggregated data, gender-sensitive indicators PMU internal procedures

Implementation manual, AWPB, gender strategy, progress reports, supervision missions

PMU external procedures

Networking, policy dialogue

Implementing partners and service providers

Demonstrable commitment and experience, joint communications strategy, joint missions

Community Participatory planning, eligibility criteria

See examples

2.5 and 2.6

Page 11: Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

V. Putting it all together

Poverty and

gender analysis of

rural livelihoods

Target group characteristics

and priority needs

ImpactImplementation arrangements

Direct targeting

Empowering measures

Procedural measures

Enabling measures

Self-targeting

Equitable workloads

Dec-making+represent

Economic empower

Why Who and where

Does it make a difference?

How to implement and when

What

How to deliver

Page 12: Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

What happens next

Project design• Working paper = foundation• Aide memoire• Project design report

• Main text• Annex 2: 6 pages, with T and G checklists• Inputs to other annexes: project components, M&E,

indicators, TORs for project staff and partners• Logframe

Project implementation• Project implementation manual• Launch/start-up workshop• Fully-developed gender strategy

Page 13: Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

Outline for full strategy

1. Introduction (0.5 page): Context, Rationale2. Vision or Goal (30 words or less!)3. Gender Mainstreaming within project activities (3-5 pages)4. Gender mainstreaming at the organizational level ( 3 pages)5. Implementation (2 pages)6. Costs and financing (2 pages)7. Risk Management ( 0.5 page)8. Results Framework (1 page)

See example

2.7

Page 14: Practical tips on preparing targeting and gender strategies

VI. Conclusion

Webinar programme29 April – Livelihoods and gender analysis20 May – Targeting and gender strategies 17 June – Monitoring and impact indicatorsOther topics – Household methodologies

RecapI. Targeting and gender strategies in project cycleII. Elements of targeting strategy and checklist III. Elements of gender strategy and checklistIV. Implementation arrangementsV. Putting it all together