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Transitioning to long-term development : an evaluation of the USAID/OTI program in Kosovo

2001EnglishRelated document: PN-ACT-237 Political developmentCODE: 167; Kosovo Serbia Central And Eastern Europe

Metadata

Authors
Morin, Robert J., Jr. | Stinson, Dana S.
Contract/Code
AEP-I-00-99-00041-00
Institution
1600 - Associates in Rural Development, Inc. (ARD) 8865 USAID. Bur. for Humanitarian Response. Ofc. of Transition Initiatives
Keywords
Political systems in transition | Post conflict societies | War recovery | Democratization | Political participation | Local level | Mass media | Institution building | Social impact | Impact assessment | Evaluation methodology JA30 Development cooperation (368.0) | Humanitarian assistance (143.5) | Disaster relief and response (110.7)
ID
PNACN234
File size
648 KB
Source
Open PDF

Abstract

Final evaluation of an Office of Transition Initiatives' (OTI) project (1998-2001) to transition USAID's humanitarian relief efforts in Kosovo to long-term development, with specific emphasis on initiating, reestablishing, or expanding democratic political processes. The evaluation used a framework model that affords greater objectivity than anecdotal evidence in evaluating project impact. To achieve the project goal, OTI chose to maximize the number of Kosovars involved in and recognizing the value of participation in decisionmaking and the future development of democracy in Kosovo. Over the course of the project, over $15 million in transition assistance was programmed, approximately 80% of it devoted to developing political processes at the community level. The project's greatest impact was achieved in this area. Communities now have locally elected governance structures, grassroots organizations articulating needs to elected officials, accountability and transparency becoming more important issues, and issues of diversity in representation being addressed. OTI also contributed significantly to the development of the media sector in Kosovo and achieved similar levels of impact with just under 15% of program funds. Despite significant periods of time in which activities were severely curtailed and even halted for reasons of security, OTI was successful in fulfilling its mandate of providing transition assistance and in handing over its program to the USAID Mission. This success was due in large part to an excellent understanding by OTI and Mission staffs of the role of transition assistance in USAID's overarching program objectives. Finally, and most importantly, there is a need for OTI to bring a greater degree of structure to transition programming, in order to more objectively determine achievement of results. (Author abstract, modified)