Danish International Development Agency (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark)

Evaluation of the Regional Development and Protection Programme - Lebanon, Jordan & Iraq

Last update: Jun 22, 2018 Last update: Jun 22, 2018

Details

Location:Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon
Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon
Category:Consulting services
Status:Awarded
Sectors:Monitoring & Evaluation, Migration & Refugees, Disaster Reduction & Humanitarian Relief

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Evaluation

Description

Restricted procedure: Evaluation of the Regional Development and Protection Programme - Lebanon

Deadline for applications: 24 July 2017, at 10:00, Danish time  

Description: 
The Evaluation Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs is commissioning an indpendent evaluation of the Regional Development and Protection Programme (RDPP), to be undertaken from August 2017 to December 2017.  

The RDPP is a multidonor programme to support Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq to better plan, mitigate and, where possible, maximise the positive effects of the presence of refugees from Syria. The four-year programme has a total budget of 42 million Euro  and is supported by eight donors; the EU, Ireland, Switzerland, the Netherlands, UK, Norway, the Czech Republic and Denmark. The EU and Denmark are the two largest donors to the programme and the programme is managed by Denmark. 

With the increased focus on the refugee situation in the region, where almost 5 million syrians have registrered as refugees in the neighbouring countries, adressing the protractedness of the crisis is key to the response. The RDPP focuses not only on immediate humanitarian needs, but also longer-term perspectives on the challenges facing both refugees and host communities. The objective of the RDPP is to ensure that refugees are able to avail themselves of a durable solution and to support the socio-economic development in host countries, benefitting host populations and refugees and enhancing the capacity of refugees to contribute as positive development actors.  

The Programme is structured around four thematic areas:  
 
1) Research: Focusing on supporting analysis and research ont he impact of the Syrian displacement on the region and on policy frameworks in the region, with a solutions-oriented perspective.

2) Advocacy and policy dialogue: Supporting dialogue platforms and development of advocacy papers to form the basis for a dialogue on the displacement crisis.

3) Protection: This includes support to partners in provision of legal assistance to vulnerable refugees and host community members, combatting child labour and capacity building of national authorities to adress protection risks in local communities.

4) Livelihoods: Enhancing the self-reliance of refugees and host communtiy members through skills-building, employment generation and support to establishing small businesses.  

The programme supports 36 projects through 30 patneships with UN agencies, international NGOs and National NGOs as well as CSOs. The partners in Lebanon receive the largest share of funds (50%), whereas Jordan and Iraq receive around around 25-30% and 15-20% of funds.  
 
The purpose of the evaluation is to document outcomes at the programme level and assessing  synergies between programme components. Moreover, the evaluation should assess the value-added of the RDPP approach of bridging humanitarian assistance with development engagements and document lessons learnt for future programming.   
 
The evaluation should be conducted by an evaluation team with extensive experience within the field of humanitarian assistance, especially related to protracted conflicts, forced displacement and bridging humanitarian and development assistance.  

The assignment is expected to start mid-August 2017 and completed in December 2017. Mission travel to Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq is planned for September 2017.  

The maximum budget for the evaluation is 980.000 DKK, including all fees and reimbursables required for the implementation of the contract.

Deadline for applications: 24 July 2017, at 10:00, Danish time

The standard application form should be used. Applications not using the standard form may be rejected. Applications received after the deadline shall be rejected.

Contact Point:

Name of Programme Officer: Marianne Vestergaard     
E-mail address, Programme Officer: marves@um.dk
Telephone of Programme Officer: +45 33920030

Criteria for selection:
A minimum of three and a maximum of five applicants references best suited for this assignment will be invited to submit a tender.

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About the Funding Agency

Danish International Development Agency (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark)

The Danish International Development Agency (DANIDA) is responsible, on behalf of Denmark's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, for delivering humanitarian help and development support to other nations with a focus on developing nations. DANIDA has four sectors of interest: human rights and democracy, green growth, social progress and stability and protection. Danida also collaborates with the UN, the World Bank, regional development banks and the EU.

About the Sectors

Monitoring & Evaluation

Supports initiatives that assess performance, measure results, and improve the effectiveness and accountability of projects and programs.


Key areas:
  • Project and programme monitoring
  • Mid-term and final evaluations
  • Impact and performance assessments
  • Learning, accountability, and results-based management

Migration & Refugees

Focuses on managing migration flows, protecting displaced populations, and supporting durable solutions for migrants and refugees.


Key areas:
  • Migration management and policy support
  • Refugee protection and assistance
  • Population movement and resettlement
  • Social integration and protection services

Locations

Iraq

Iraq’s infrastructure development remains focused on reconstruction and modernisation of transport, energy and utilities after years of conflict and underinvestment. Projects such as railway extension and energy system rehabilitation are intended to improve connectivity, boost trade, create jobs and diversify the economy beyond oil. Financing is a mix of international support (e.g., World Bank and JICA assistance), hydrocarbons revenues and emerging private sector involvement in infrastructure financing platforms. Key constraints include fiscal vulnerabilities, governance weaknesses, and the need to balance reconstruction priorities with sustainable long-term development objectives.

Nr. of tenders: 19072
Nr. of grants: 2768
Nr. of donors: 466
Nr. of jobs: 25

Jordan

Jordan’s infrastructure development emphasises water security, renewable energy and transport improvements amid limited domestic resources and regional pressures. Investments, often supported by multilateral partners, seek to enhance grid stability, expand clean energy capacity and modernise logistics to stimulate jobs and private investment. Government reform programmes aim to unlock private sector-led growth, improve fiscal sustainability and build socio-economic resilience. Key constraints include water scarcity, fiscal pressures and the need for continued improvements in regulatory and investment governance to attract capital.

Nr. of tenders: 13415
Nr. of grants: 3000
Nr. of donors: 547
Nr. of jobs: 105
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