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Monitoring Systemic Change in Inclusive Agribusiness

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posted on 2024-09-05, 22:01 authored by Sietze Vellema, Greetje Schouten, Marijn Faling
Evaluations of private sector development programmes look at what changed to the workings of the system, and whether these changes are scalable, resilient, and sustainable. We present an evaluation lens that primarily qualifies changes to the systemic nature of food provisioning in markets. It converts theoretical frameworks into ‘antennae’ receptive to early signs of systemic effects of inclusive agribusiness that fosters food and nutrition security. The tools for this theory-informed approach were developed and applied in 2SCALE, a Dutch-funded programme aiming to incubate inclusive agribusiness and contribute to food and nutrition security goals in Africa. The article reflects on what to monitor to detect early signs of systemic effects and how monitoring can be embedded in unfolding business and partnering processes. It concludes that taking a theory-informed approach gives directionality to strategising and planning, and enhances capacities of partners in inclusive business projects to lead actions towards realising systemic effects.

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Institute of Development Studies

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Vellema, S., Schouten, G., and Faling, M. (2022) 'Monitoring Systemic Change in Inclusive Agribusiness' in Ton, G. and Vellema, S. (Eds) Theory-Based Evaluation of Inclusive Business Programmes, IDS Bulletin 53.1, Brighton: IDS

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IDS Bulletin 53.1

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Article

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Institute of Development Studies

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en

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Rural Futures

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Default project::9ce4e4dc-26e9-4d78-96e9-15e4dcac0642::600

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    Volume 53. Issue 1: Theory-Based Evaluation of Inclusive Business Programmes

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