TENDER NOTICE FOR CONSULTANCY SERVICES
Title of the Tender: Hiring an Individual Consultant /Consultancy firm to conduct a retrospective evaluation of the Commerçantes Solidaires pour la Paix dans la Région des Grands Lacs (COSOPAX/RGL).
Tender Reference Number: CRS-Rwanda 012-FY24-TN/2024
Procurement Method: National Open Competitive Tender
Date of Issue: January 24th ,2024
Deadline for submission: February 7th, 2024
Terms of Reference for Hiring an Individual Consultant/Consultancy firm to conduct a retrospective evaluation of the Commerçantes Solidaires pour la Paix dans la Région des Grands Lacs (COSOPAX/RGL) Project
Catholic Relief Services is the official international humanitarian agency of the Catholic community in the United States. CRS works to save, protect, and transform lives in need in more than 100 countries, without regard to race, religion or nationality. CRS’ relief and development works are accomplished through programs of emergency response, HIV, health, agriculture, education, microfinance, and peacebuilding. The Country Program has over 80 staff and implements its projects through local and international partners, with strong coordination/collaboration with Government of Rwanda structures. Catholic Relief Services (CRS) has been working in Rwanda since 1961. CRS Rwanda’s key programing areas include youth empowerment, agriculture, early childhood development, economic strengthening, justice, and peace building. To achieve this, CRS collaborates with the government of Rwanda, donors, the Catholic church, private sector, and civil society organizations.
COSOPAX/RGL was a cross-border project that operated from 2013-2019 in the area between Rwanda, Burundi, and eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) that has been the grounds of protracted cycles of violent conflict for the past three decades. The conflict particularly took on regional dimensions after the 1994 genocide in Rwanda against Tutsi that triggered massive refugee flows out of the country, followed by persistent insecurity in eastern DRC. These events led to seemingly intractable cycles of conflict with spillover effects at the regional level, entrenching suspicion, fear, and mistrust among populations divided by national borders. Although the drivers of conflict are linked to the political and economic interests of elites, the impact reverberates at the grassroots level, where rumors, prejudices and political manipulation have increased divisions, fear and mistrust between individuals and communities within and across borders.
To address the increased fear, mistrust, and stereotypes within and between communities, CRS launched COSOPAX in 2013, with the goal of bringing female cross-border traders together across dividing lines to strengthen their economic and social capacities to work for peace. COSOPAX reinforced and built upon the natural connections between women traders, by creating opportunities for increased interaction, dialogue, and collaboration in trade, with the hopes of building trust between individuals and communities across borders.
Cross-border trade is mostly carried out by small traders, an estimated 85% of whom are women.[1] The many cycles of conflict that continue to affect the region limit the livelihood options of women, coupled with land reforms that deprive women of their agricultural means of subsistence. For most female traders, cross-border trading is a key survival mechanism in the absence of other economic alternatives. Small cross-border trade can be defined as, “any revenue-generating cross-border commercial activity with a daily transaction value of less than 100 US dollars (USD) per trader[2]
Women cross-border traders in the Great Lakes region play an important role in building and maintaining interdependent socio-economic relationships between their border communities and nations. Yet, women in the cross-border areas continue to face cultural, political, and economic obstacles, which limit their ability to actively exercise leadership for conflict resolution and peace promotion. Recognizing the critical and potentially transformative role that women traders play in social and economic processes, the COSOPAX program sought to enhance women’s skills and capabilities in peacebuilding, coupled with economic strengthening strategies. The project operated in Bukavu and Uvira in DRC, Cyangugu in Rwanda, and Bujumbura in Burundi. It included 120 total program participants who worked together in a socio-economic network to strengthen trade and peace promotion in the cross-border areas.
The objectives of the COSOPAX program were: 1) Women cross-border traders in the Great Lakes region collaborate in a formal socio-economic network for peace; 2) Women cross-border traders in the Great Lakes region mobilize people and systems in their respective communities for long-term peacebuilding. The corresponding theories of change were:
Theory of change for objective #1: By bringing together women engaged in cross-border trading on a regular basis, they will overcome mistrust and prejudices that divide them, and they will cultivate resistance to ethno-political manipulation.
Theory of change for objective #2: If women cross-border traders acquire better competencies in peacebuilding, they will be able to contribute to intra- and inter- communal conflict resolution without resorting to violence, which will reinforce a culture of peace in the region.
It was expected that increased interactions and dialogue between informal traders from the three countries would lead to increased trust and social cohesion between border communities. The theory of change assumes that if women are trained in peace promotion and economic strengthening and supported to carry out advocacy on issues of common interest, they will serve as a positive example of tolerance, solidarity, and collaboration across lines of division, and will subsequently be able to mobilize people and systems in their communities for long-term peacebuilding.
In FY 2019, the COSOPAX project was closed and COSOPAX women were engaged in continuing the social cohesion mission on their own. Since then, the COSOPAX associations in all the three countries have developed a culture of providing regular assistance to the vulnerable and assisting in advocacy and conflict mediation in line with a call for all abled people to contribute however possible in solidarity with the neediest of their communities.
The purpose of this study is to conduct a retrospective evaluation of the former CRS-funded “Commerçantes Solidaires pour la Paix dans la Région des Grands Lacs” (COSOPAX/RGL) project, with the goal of assessing the impact that COSOPAX has had on project participants and community members focus primarily on the ex-post impacts, replication/expansion, and sustainability. The goal of this retrospective evaluation is to measure and document the project’s impact, localization achievements, and sustainability against its goal and strategic objectives.
The retrospective evaluation, in addition to meeting the OCECD /DAC sustainability goals, will be expected to respond to the following criteria and evaluation questions as suggested by the OECD/DAC criteria for evaluation of development programs 
The retrospective evaluation should consider findings from the project endline study and other evaluation in order to further assess the continued impact and long-term sustainability of COSOPAX considering the program goals, objectives and participants (both direct and indirect).
It is expected that the selected candidate will design his/her data collection methodology including a questionnaire with general questions to guide the conduct of the evaluation, per the terms of reference. The main questions should be focused on current perceptions and compared to data generated during and at the end of the CRS-funded project. The methodology is expected to be participatory & inclusive, to use mixed methods and to be conflict-sensitive, etc. To that effect, the consultant will propose the conceptual framework(s) he/she will use to guide the evaluation.
Potential program documents to be reviewed will include:
Expected to take place in February 2024.
The consultant will be selected using the quality and cost-based selection against the following criteria:
Technical Evaluation Criteria |
Weighting |
|
Education and qualifications |
Holder of a master’s or a PhD degree in relevant fields with strong background in working with local / international NGOs in the impact and sustainability evaluation domain. |
10 |
Experience and key achievements |
Demonstrate at least 5 years of working experience in conducting project evaluation, impact and sustainability assessment preferably in the field the peacebuilding sector or community development projects. |
10 |
The consultant should have demonstrated research and analytical skills, including the ability to collect, analyze, and interpretation, leading to the production of comprehensive evaluation report. |
10 |
|
Capability to effectively present impact evaluation findings to stakeholders through reports and presentations. Familiarity with the great lakes’ region context and regulations related to research protocols, including experience in obtaining necessary approvals from relevant authorities. Demonstrate proof of previous experience in similar assignment. |
10 |
|
Methodology and approach |
Clarity and appropriateness of the proposed evaluation methodology considering the project's objectives and scope. Demonstration of understanding the mixed quantitative and qualitative research methods needed for the baseline survey. Possess solid methodological and impact evaluation skills demonstrated through evaluation evidence. |
30 |
Workplan |
Adequacy of the work plan in covering all key aspects outlined in the scope of work. Clarity and completeness in defining tasks, activities, and milestones related to the evaluation. |
10 |
Sub-Total -Technical |
80 |
|
Total for Financial proposal (Value for money based on fee rates, inputs, and total costs of the assignment) |
20 |
|
TOTAL |
100 |
N.B: The minimum technical score for the consultant to pass the technical stage is 70%.
The financial score for each consultant/firm will be calculated using the following formula:
# |
Description |
No of days |
Unit price RWF |
Total price RWF |
1 |
Remuneration |
|||
2 |
Reimbursables expenses(details) |
Note:
CRS will cover expenses related to the participation of the relevant parties.
All documents and data will remain the CRS property and must be treated as confidential and used solely to facilitate this assignment.
Interested individual consultant/ Consultancy Firm are encouraged to send their applications to rwandabids@crs.org no later than February 7th , 2024 at 11:00am Kigali time. The title of the email must include: “Retrospective evaluation for COSOPAX RGL.’’ and the application document should include the technical proposal and financial proposal in two PDF documents. A late submission will not be considered.
Length of the bid document
Interested bidders should submit technical and financial proposal documents that do not exceed 10 pages maximum without annexes.
Done at Kigali, January 24th , 2024.
Charlotte BATANAGE
Acting Country Representative
[1] World Bank (2011). “Facilitating cross-border trade between the DRC and Neighbors in the Great Lakes Region of Africa: Improving Conditions for Poor Traders,” Report No. 62992 – AFR. Washington, DC.
[2] Ibid.
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