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World Bank resilience M&E (ReM&E) : good practice case studies (English)

These case studies were developed as part of the World Bank's Results Monitoring and Evaluation for Resilience Building Operations (ReM&E) project, which aims to develop and increase the application of systematic, robust, and useful approaches to monitoring and evaluation (M&E) for resilience-building projects/programs within the World Bank. The case studies propose to foster a grounded understanding of good ReM&E practices through real-world examples. The intended audiences are Task Team Leaders (TTLs) and operational staff of the World Bank who design and/or oversee the implementation of M&E for resilience-building operations, as well as their counterparts at other development organizations.

Details

  • Document Date

    2017/08/01

  • Document Type

    Working Paper

  • Report Number

    119939

  • Volume No

    1

  • Total Volume(s)

    1

  • Country

    World,

  • Region

    The World Region,

  • Disclosure Date

    2017/09/22

  • Disclosure Status

    Disclosed

  • Doc Name

    World Bank resilience M&E (ReM&E) : good practice case studies

  • Keywords

    agricultural growth and rural development;land and water management;resilience to climate change;data collection and analysis;Land and Water Resources;food and agriculture organization;impact of climate change;information and communication technology;gross domestic product;theory of change;climate change impact;high value crops;climate change implications;abundant water resource;lack of water;climate change risk;learning by doing;improved agricultural technologies;rural coastal areas;flood retention area;source of employment;land use plan;development of water;water per day;water for agriculture;project impact evaluation;inclusive economic growth;greenhouse gas emission;access to irrigation;international development assistance;coastal protection;results framework;irrigation scheme;agricultural productivity;farm household;personal communication;smallholder farmer;climate resilience;water use;rainfall pattern;agricultural production;climate-smart agriculture;sluice gate;coast line;marginalized group;drought conditions;young people;information provision;core objectives;spatial context;community level;resource constraint;global experience;drought events;institutional memory;staff turnover;matching grant;noncommercial purposes;operational guidance;thematic studies;agricultural resilience;agricultural transformation;extreme poverty;agriculture sector;management oversight;drought stress;Water Allocation;government institution;monitoring equipment;salinity intrusion;coastal provinces;innovation activity;monitoring stations;rice crop;aquaculture farm;Ethnic Minorities;alternative livelihood;brackish water;data needs;resilient infrastructure;infrastructure support;consistent interpretation;outcome indicator;reporting system;monitoring indicator;production risk;extreme weather;continuous innovation;evaluation process;farm productivity;extension service;adaptive capacity;operational staff;irrigation infrastructure;land area;foreign exchange;merchandise export;food requirement;production planning;support infrastructure;knowledge gap;extensive consultation;farming system;semiarid land;Irrigated Agriculture;irrigation system;intended audiences;participatory management;water user;climate variation;learning need;agricultural season;crop yield;Livestock Production;climatic stress;agricultural sector;market information;Pastoral Farming;learning opportunity;increasing incidence;conceptual approach;real gdp;production asset;enhancing access;drought response;arable land;rice yield;international level;livestock loss;food crisis;crop production;arid region;climate shock;agriculture system;vulnerable group;pastoral community;project reporting;soil management;rangeland management;smallholder farming;livestock service;seed system;water availability;wet season;flash flood;tropical cyclone;future risks;evaluation design;Capital Investments;subsidiary right;aquaculture product;shrimp farming;extension program;external shock;dry season;community monitoring;measurement methods;water requirement;pilot testing;water flow;saline intrusion;unsustainable use;water measurement;

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Citation

World Bank resilience M&E (ReM&E) : good practice case studies (English). Resilience Monitoring and Evaluation (ReM&E) Washington, D.C. : World Bank Group. https://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/400851506100481060/World-Bank-resilience-M-E-ReM-E-good-practice-case-studies