Journal Article

IDS Bulletin Vol. 41 Nos. 6

Three Approaches to Monitoring: Feedback Systems, Participatory Monitoring and Evaluation and Logical Frameworks

Published on 1 November 2010

This article compares key attributes, strengths and weaknesses of three different approaches to monitoring development interventions: the logical framework approach, participatory monitoring and evaluation (PM&E) and feedback systems. Academic and practitioner literature describes how logframes meet the needs of senior decision-makers to summarise, organise and compare projects.

PM&E meets the needs of field staff to work sensitively with intended beneficiaries and support their learning and empowerment. Feedback systems appear to link the two, providing performance data for managers and creating incentives for implementing staff to focus on their intended beneficiaries.

Feedback systems build on the rich heritage of PM&E and are compatible with logframes. They may help provide a manageable and effective approach to accountability that links the means and the ends of development interventions. Feedback systems are at an early stage of development. There is a lot to learn about how and where they work best.

Related Content

This article comes from theĀ IDS Bulletin 41.6 (2010) Three Approaches to Monitoring: Feedback Systems, Participatory Monitoring and Evaluation and Logical Frameworks

Cite this publication

Jacobs, A., Barnett, C. and Ponsford, R. (2010) Three Approaches to Monitoring: Feedback Systems, Participatory Monitoring and Evaluation and Logical Frameworks. IDS Bulletin 41(6): 36-44

Authors

Chris Barnett

Honorary Associate

Alex Jacobs
Richard Ponsford

Publication details

published by
IDS
authors
Jacobs, A., Barnett, C. and Ponsford, R.
journal
IDS Bulletin, volume 41, issue 6
doi
10.1111/j.1759-5436.2010.00180.x

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