
Tracking Progress and Achievement
This section of the toolkit offers tools for tracking progress (monitoring) and
assessing achievement (evaluation).
Monitoring will help ensure that projects stay on course and on budget.
Effective evaluations of repeat victimisation initiatives seek to answer the following
questions:
- Has repeat victimisation been reduced?
- If so, is the project or programme responsible for the reduction, or would it have
happened anyway?
- If the initiative has several components, have all the components contributed to
the reduction or have some been effective while others have not had any impact?
- Is the initiative (or elements of it) worth replicating?
In practice this means:
- Comparing reductions in the project area with trends in the wider area and in a
control area with similar characteristics
- Documenting individual components in a programme separately to identify which elements
have had an impact.
- Calculating costs and savings arising from the project to assess value for money.
- Looking at specific local circumstances which may have influenced the outcome of
the project and affect the ease with which the project can be replicated.
Key general principles for evaluators
Sample monitoring and evaluation framework
Assessing costs and benefits [to be added]
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