Terms of Reference for hiring a national consulting firm or a consultant to conduct:
‘’A comprehensive Outcome Harvesting of the 15 year-long Public Policy Information Monitoring and Advocacy (PPIMA) Programme in Rwanda”.
1. Background and Justification
Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA) is seeking to hire the services of a reputable national consulting form to technically assist her with the conducting of a comprehensive outcome harvesting of its flagship citizens’ voice empowerment and civil society organisations (CSOs) support programme known as Public Policy Information, Monitoring and Advocacy (PPIMA).
Rwanda being a rapidly evolving country context to operate in, PPIMA has had to continuously re-adjust its course of action for a better adaptation to the context but also for ensuring continued relevance vis-à-vis the country and people’s specific needs. Accordingly, and even when the outcomes of PPIMA were in most-cases pre-determined at the time of each phase planning, not everything has evolved as per the initial plan of action. This justifies why NPA is planning to comprehensively harvest the outcomes of PPIMA over the last 15 years of implementation.
The intended outcome harvesting is critical for NPA to comprehensively capture and systematically document as well as substantiate the outstanding changes-whether intended or unintended- that are attributable to PPIMA and or which it has allegedly contributed to over the last 15 years of implementation.
1.1 About the Public Policy Information Monitoring and Advocacy (PPIMA)
Having started off as a low-scale pilot project in 2009 and a year later upgraded to a fully-fledged project, the Public Policy Information, Monitoring and Advocacy (PPIMA) is a ‘’civil society support {and citizens’ voice empowerment} project aimed at strengthening the interest among Rwandan civil society organizations (CSOs) and citizens in public policy affairs’’[1].
PPIMA, which is currently 15 years old, has along the way evolved into a multi-year and multi-phased programme, hence becoming NPA’s flagship development cooperation process with Rwanda. Since its establishment in 2009, PPIMA consistently worked to support citizens and CSOs’ efforts to self-organise and acquire the skills they need to meaningfully engage in national and local level processes of policy formulation, implementation, monitoring and evaluation.
Consistent with the country’s strategic priorities in the areas of good governance, PPIMA’s end-purpose has always been to ensure that the different policy choices and programmes adopted by the Government of Rwanda (GoR) are informed by citizens’ inputs and that they deliver improved (public) services and goods that adequately respond to the needs and aspirations of all Rwandans, and the poor and most vulnerable groups in particular.
Implemented in phases (up to four now) within a wider national context of decentralisation and localized inclusive development, the overall goal of PPIMA is still to reduce inequality between different segments of the population (women, men, youth, poor and vulnerable groups and localities of the country) through equal redistribution of and access to (voice) power and resources. For a quick overview of the different implementation phases of PPIMA and what their individual focus was all about, check the below attached document:
PPIMA’s interventions are built around five mutually supportive intervention pillars: (i) citizen participation empowerment, of which the Community Score Card (CSC) is emblematic, and related advocacy; (ii) conflict resolution and access to justice and related advocacy through approaches such as Anti-Corruption, Justice and Information Centres (AJICs), Advocacy and Legal Advice Centres (ALACs), Women Safe Spaces (WSS), Community Safe Spaces (CSS), Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) and Public Interest Litigation (PIL); (iii) human rights awareness, anti-corruption and related advocacy; (iv) environment and climate change awareness and related advocacy and lastly, (v) promotion of gender-sensitive policy and budget planning and practices, under which falls GBV prevention and response, and related advocacy.
Along the way and on basis of accumulated learning (s) about what was working or what was not, PPIMA design in all its different intervention pillars has had to adapt to the operative context and demands of the moment to keep its relevance in terms of meaningfully contributing to the implementation of national priorities while addressing people’s needs. PPIMA is coordinated by Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA) which works in partnership and solidarity with local and national civil society organizations covering different geographies ranging from local to national. Together, these CSOs catalyse and facilitate- through research and media- a quality dialogue between decision-makers and citizens on matters of concern to the later and to influence desired changes in relation to policy choices and service delivery practices.
PPIMA is a multi-donor funded programme to which different bilateral donors contribute or have contributed through a basket funding mechanism. Current donors include the Swedish International Development Agency (SIDA), Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation(NORAD), Swiss Development Cooperation (SDC) and the Danish Government which has recently joined. The Department for International Development (DFI), which has now become FCDO, is a past donor.
1.2 About NPA
Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA) is a non-governmental organisation with roots in trade unions and labour movements. NPA supports processes towards democracy and equitable distribution of power and resources amongst people and localities. The international development cooperation strategy affirms civil society as a key pillar for nation building, democracy and development and views human rights as building blocks for development and redistribution of power and resources.
NPA interventions in Rwanda begun in the immediate aftermath of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi and has ever since evolved as the country walked away from post-conflict reconstruction to embrace long-term development and gains consolidation. From 2009 to date, NPA’s interventions in Rwanda focus on supporting the advancement of good governance and human rights as pathways to a just distribution of power and resources. NPA does this through the Public Policy Information Monitoring and Advocacy (PPIMA).
2. Objectives
The overall objective of this consultancy is to comprehensively identify, verify and document the most outstanding changes that past and current partner CSOs claim were experienced by different target groups and stakeholders who engaged or continue to engage with PPIMA across its different intervention pillars and along its different phases from 2009 to present. Specifically, this analytical assignment will seek to:
3. Relevance of the assignment and potential use of the results
The results of the comprehensive PPIMA outcome harvesting will be primarily used by NPA, partner CSOs and other interested stakeholders to inform their strategic thinking and future programming decision-making, capitalising on lessons learnt about what works while guarding against continuing investing in practices that are not working. The outcome harvesting results will also be used for purely learning purposes, in addition to feeding into the upcoming final evaluation of PPIMA.
4. Scope of work
The scope of work will include but is not limited to:
Note: Unless it is only contributing new knowledge and fresh insights about outstanding outcomes that were overlooked, the PPIMA comprehensive outcome harvesting is expected to put less emphasis on the Community Score Card (CSC)-related outcomes whose harvesting is largely being addressed through a dedicated CSC impact study. This is meant to ensure that there is no duplication of efforts. Accordingly, the relevant consultants hired separately by NPA to lead these two assignments will be, to the extent possible, encouraged to exchange notes about the emerging outcomes when and as needed particularly in case the CSC impact study is yet to be completed.
5. Preferred methodology
In the process of harvesting the changes, NPA strongly encourages the use of an inclusive and participatory outcome harvesting approach which capitalises on engagements and conversation with relevant informants as subject matter experts. Particularly encouraged to be used is the Group Analysis Methods (GAMs) which allows for the co-identification and co-verification of change contribution and or attribution claims and hence the co-creation of knowledge thereof. A predominantly qualitative outcome harvesting method is recommended but NPA is also open to suggestions that allow to capture PPIMA outcomes that can be quantified.
6. Key deliverables and timelines
The successful national consulting firm or a consultant will be hired for a maximum of 80 man-days, spread across a period counted from the last week of April until beginning of October 2024 and will deliver the following key deliverables within the stipulated timelines:
Deliverables |
Timeframe |
Maximum duration |
1. An inception (methodology) report not exceeding 10 pages, annexes not included, clarifying among others the preferred outcome harvesting design along with the overriding questions to be addressed as well as the relevant tools for ensuring data collection and adequate documentation of the harvested outcomes. |
By the 15h May 2024. |
5 days |
2.A systematic collection of relevant documentation produced, in the past, by NPA herself and by partner CSOs in relation to PPIMA, including analytical works. |
By the 30th May, 2024 |
10 days |
3. Individual thematic reports not exceeding 10 pages (A4 format) each and aggregating PPIMA major outcomes as per each intervention pillars and sub-components/approaches. |
By 30th August, 2024 |
40 days |
4. A consolidated master outcome harvesting report (straight to the point and not exceeding 40 pages, references and annexes not included) presenting outcomes against the different intervention pillars and written in a practical and user-friendly way with a problem-solving focus, rather than in an academic jargon. |
By 30th September, 2024 |
20 days |
5.A creative Power Point presentation (not exceeding 10 slides) highlighting the key outcomes and the results of the analysis of their sustainability across time, groups of people and geographies. |
By 30th September, 2024 |
1 day |
6. A three up to five-pager infographic report visually summarising the most outstanding PPIMA outcomes realised over the last 15 years of engagement. |
By 8th October, 2024 |
2 day |
7.A three-pager PPIMA outcomes brief derived from the master outcome harvesting report. |
By 8th October, 2024 |
2 day |
7. Supervision and quality assurance
The successful entity will have the primary responsibility for ensuring high quality standards of the outcome harvesting execution process and related deliverables. He/she will functionally report to the NPA Policy and Strategy Advisor as the lead quality assurer of the assignment and its related deliverables, supported by NPA MEAL team.
8. Desired profile of the applicant
To be administratively eligible for this consultancy opportunity, the bidder should:
9. Procurement method
This tender follows a competitive tendering method and is only open to consulting companies and consultant physically and legally established in Rwanda and who meet the minimum profile administrative criteria described under section 8.
10. How to submit the offers
A technical offer not exceeding 15 pages, annexes excluded, and a separate financial offer must be virtually submitted to nparwanda@npaid.org with the mention “PPIMA Comprehensive Outcome Harvesting’’ under the subject heading before or not later than the 27th April 2024 at 4:00 p.m. Kigali local time. No hard copy submissions will be accepted.
Applicants will have to ensure that their technical offers clearly demonstrates and or includes:
The financial offer should be submitted separately and shall indicate:
11. Evaluation criteria and scoring
NPA maintains very high-quality standards in everything it does. Thus, the evaluation and scoring of the offers received will follow a quality-based selection method that prioritises the soundness of the technical offer over the pricing. However, NPA reserves the right not to award the tender to the best qualifying bidder in case the financial negotiations were unsuccessful.
Technical offer:
Description |
Weightage |
|
1 |
Quality soundness of the technical offer in terms of the proposed methodology and how it relevantly addresses all the objectives as well as the different elements of scope of work. |
40% |
2 |
Suitability of expertise of the proposed core team as evidenced by the fulfilment of the minimum eligibility criteria. |
15% |
3 |
Experience of implementing similar work with development organizations (15%) |
15% |
4 |
Sufficiently detailed financial proposal in EUR (consultant fees, clear breakdown of activity costs, etc.) |
30% |
Done at Kigali on the 17th April 2024
[1] Dastgeer, A. et Al. (2011). Evaluation of the SIDA and DFID funded Public Policy Information, Monitoring and Advocacy (PPIMA) project in Rwanda. Final Report. Unpublished
Join a Focused Community on job search to uncover both advertised and non-advertised jobs that you may not be aware of. A jobs WhatsApp Group Community can ensure that you know the opportunities happening around you and a jobs Facebook Group Community provides an opportunity to discuss with employers who need to fill urgent position. Click the links to join. You can view previously sent Email Alerts here incase you missed them and Subscribe so that you never miss out.