NZ VASS impact assessment: Pilot programme-Facilitator’s report
Date
2001-07
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Participatory Research in Asia (PRIA)
Abstract
How can impact assessment become a process of learning rather than only an exercise in measurement? This facilitator’s report by Anju Dwivedi documents the NZ VASS Participatory Impact Assessment Pilot Programme and reflects on how evaluation can be transformed through sustained participation, capacity building, and institutional commitment. The programme was designed not simply to assess outcomes, but to immerse partner organisations in the philosophical and methodological foundations of participatory impact assessment while learning from experiences of the past. Drawing on pilot initiatives in India, Bangladesh, Fiji, and New Zealand linked organisations, the report shows how facilitators worked with staff, communities, and local groups to identify indicators, plan assessments, collect evidence, and analyse change together. A wide range of participatory tools were used, including mapping, role play, Venn diagrams, interviews, ranking, focus groups, and seasonal analysis. These methods enabled communities to articulate impacts in their own terms and strengthened confidence, ownership, and dialogue. A central lesson of the report is that participatory impact assessment succeeds only when organisations demonstrate a genuine commitment to the process. It requires time, openness, and willingness to learn by doing.
Description
Keywords
Community-Based Participatory Research, SDG 17: Partnerships for the Goals, New Zealand
Citation
Dwivedi, A. (2001). NZ VASS impact assessment: Pilot programme – Facilitator’s report. Participatory Research in Asia (PRIA).
