AfriKids' Theory of Change

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Registered Charity No: 1141028

Our Theory of Change How we make change happen


Registered Charity No: 1141028

Introduction For organisations working to make changes in the world, a Theory of Change helps define long-term goals and map out all of the actions, factors and people involved in achieving them.

• Making the process part of our on-going learning and

This document outlines the changes AfriKids wants to see for children and communities in northern Ghana, all of the people and factors that influence whether those changes can be made, and how we can help make them happen.

The first stage of the process involved consulting children and young people from the three key districts of Ghana’s Upper East Region that AfriKids has worked in over the years. We aimed to find out what impact AfriKids has had on their lives and communities and what further changes are needed; who and what helps them achieve those changes (including themselves and the most important stakeholders); and which of the approaches we have used have been successful. We used participatory community tools like the ‘Journey of life’, ‘Venn diagrams’ and ‘Bean ranking’ to help them analyse and prioritise. We documented the findings from these exercises.

This Theory of Change guides our strategy and all of our programme plans, helping to ensure they are as effective as possible in working towards our mission. Background AfriKids believes in the rights of all children, everywhere, and exists to help improve life for children in northern Ghana, where more than half of all families live in poverty and many children live at risk. It began in 1997 with a small group of passionate and committed local people wanting to help children at risk in their communities. In 2002 a fundraising charity was registered in the UK to help fund this work and by 2005 it was formally established as a nongovernmental organisation (NGO) in Ghana. AfriKids has become a household name in the Upper East Region and after more than a decade of work, we wanted to pause and reflect on what we have achieved and what remains to be done. We wanted to understand the impact to which we had contributed as an organisation and the approaches that had worked for us and those that had not. AfriKids therefore began a Theory of Change (ToC) process with the ultimate aim of documenting and streamlining our work in terms of where we are now and where we want to go, so that moving forward we can make our work even more effective and operate with a clearer purpose.

Developing our Theory of Change In June 2015, the organisation began our Theory of Change process with support from an external consultant. We followed best practice principles to ensure it was meaningful and effective:

• Drawing on learning from our beneficiaries,

stakeholders and internal and external research

• Involving a range of staff and other stakeholders in an open and participatory process

• Acknowledging the complexity of change and our contribution within the wider context

organisational systems

Consultation with beneficiaries

Review of internal and external learning In the next stage of the process, the consultant carried out a review of relevant AfriKids and external research documents. She also interviewed a range of stakeholders who could not be part of the planned Theory of Change workshop, including representatives from AfriKids UK staff and Board and AfriKids Ghana Board and external sectoral experts. This review centred on the same core Theory of Change questions as the consultation. The consultant drew the findings together in summary notes.

Theory of change workshop The third stage and climax of the process was a threeday Theory of Change workshop with AfriKids staff and leaders in Ghana. The consultant first visited some of the organisation’s projects to acquaint herself with the work and history of the organisation. Workshop participants drew on their experiences, the documented learning and the findings from the consultation with beneficiaries to analyse and prioritise AfriKids’ contribution to change. We summarised our analysis in a draft diagram, honed by a working group after the workshop and then in this narrative.

Representing our Theory of Change Our Theory of Change diagram captures our core beliefs about how AfriKids contributes to change within a complex context where other influences play their part, both negatively and positively. We do not see change as a linear process but as a combination of factors and groups that help to bring about a desired impact. Our Theory of Change highlights the most important aspects amongst these and shows some of the linkages. It does not cover detailed strategies but provides a framework to agree and monitor these.

• Building on our existing learning but also challenging it and analysing our assumptions

© AfriKids 2017 | Theory of Change

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Our Theory of Change How we make change happen Impact

Because of AfriKids and our partners, children at risk in northern Ghana attain quality education, are safe and supported and lead healthy lives, so that they can become responsible and productive adults children at risk

Long-term changes

attain a good education

Beneficiaries and change agents

to become responsible and productive citizens community groups

mothers

Influences: Positive Negative Mixed

lead healthy lives

are safe and supported

soothsayers/ concoction men

religious leaders

chiefs fathers

community akeholders st

community/ goverment structures, schemes & policies (for education and safety)

Approach

Ghana Education Service

teachers

gender, children and social protection

weak str uctures, poor monitoring climate change

children/youth engagement and influence

community responsibility and ownership

strategic partner NGOs

balancing direct support with systemic change

strengthening and influencing government

quality local staff Principles Supporting systems

effective governance

UK Registered Charity Number: 1141028 | Ghana Registered Charity Number: DSW/3024

private sector

ers gover nment and private stakehold

traditi onal practice iteracy s, poverty and ill

strategic partner NGOs

media

District Assembly

organisation development

AfriKids UK support

funding


Registered Charity No: 1141028

The change we want to see Impact AfriKids’ vision is A prosperous and thriving world without poverty, where the rights of every child are valued, protected and met by all and our mission towards this is To help eradicate poverty by ensuring the protection, education and health of at-risk children in northern Ghana, through empowering local people to make sustainable changes. The impact statement in our Theory of Change defines this mission further, determining who we are trying to help, how and why: Because of AfriKids and our partners children at risk in northern Ghana attain quality education, are safe and supported and lead healthy lives, so that they can become responsible and productive adults.

Long-term changes Our impact statement refers to three long-term goals. In order to realise our desired impact, these must be achieved. Children at risk:

Attain a good education This long-term goal underlies our Education Programme, which has the specific objective to Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote learning opportunities for children and young adults

Are safe and supported This long-term goal underlies our Child Protection Programme, which has the specific objective to Ensure all children are safe and supported

Lead healthy lives This long-term goal underlies our Health Programme, which has the specific objective to Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for child development

© AfriKids 2017 | Theory of Change

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Registered Charity No: 1141028

Who we are trying to help Beneficiaries and change-agents While our work both directly and indirectly benefits people at all levels of society and across different communities, the priority is to support children at risk. While the United Nations recognises a child up to 18 years of age, for the purpose of our work, AfriKids recognises children up to 21 years of age. This allows for the delayed or slower pace of development commonly experienced by children at risk in northern Ghana. For the purpose of our work, children at risk are defined as:

• Children affected by harmful traditional beliefs and practices (including child, early and forced marriage and the ‘Spirit Child Phenomenon’)

• Children at risk of dropping out of school • Children without a safe home or family support: motherless children, street and working children, children in worst forms of child labour, trafficked children, children migrating to the south to engage in menial jobs

• Children with disabilities • Children living in abject poverty While our work supports all children at risk, without discrimination, we also tackle issues specifically affecting women and girls, including advocating education for girls and preventing child marriage.

© AfriKids 2017 | Theory of Change

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Registered Charity No: 1141028

Factors that affect change happening Influences Contextual influences Ghana is a highly polarised country, with 70% of people in the north living in poverty, compared with 11% in its southern capital, Accra. An unacceptable one in nine children across the northern regions die before their fifth birthday and many children still miss out on the basic education which could help them break their family’s cycle of poverty. The north has a largely savannah landscape with stark rainy and dry seasons. Most people rely on subsistence agriculture and there are relatively few natural resources that can be utilised in manufacturing or export industries. The region’s infrastructure is patchy; many people have no access to clean water, electricity or roads. Schools and clinics are approaching universal coverage but the building is often rudimentary and there is not enough equipment and trained personnel. The region is largely stable with faiths peacefully co-existing. More than half of all people across northern Ghana live on less than £1.18 per day, and there are few opportunities for them to change this. The few individuals that do get the chance to earn qualifications usually migrate south in search of work, so the north struggles to retain the skills that could stimulate the economic growth it needs. Significant investment is needed in infrastructure, though disparate communities with high rates of illiteracy put little pressure on the government to demand these changes.

Stakeholder influences We as an organisation understand that we operate in a very fragile environment where the task of ensuring the safety, education and health of all children is a complex and sensitive business - not least in ensuring any changes made to do this can be sustained. Many people, organisations and factors influence the success of our efforts to do just this:

• Government institutions, policies and policy execution; • Family and community groups and their traditional beliefs and practices; and

• Non-government and private institutions. Identifying and taking cognisance of these influences gives us the opportunity to maximise those factors that support our work, and manage those that have the potential to hinder it.

It also shows the interface between these two groups (in essence the bridge between policy and systems affecting children and the realities at home) which is a strategic point for our interventions. The diagram shows those that already influence change positively in green and those that can have both positive or negative influences in blue. This highlights key stakeholders for AfriKids to invest time “converting to green”. Some factors have a significant negative influence that AfriKids cannot directly impact, such as climate change, shown in red. These factors will be captured in organisation risk assessments and mitigation strategies put in place to limit their detrimental impact.

Changing the bigger picture - goals for systemic change In order to create sustainable impact, AfriKids works to create systemic change too – improving the systems that relate to our goals and affect children’s lives - namely the education, healthcare and child protection systems in northern Ghana. This gives our work wider and more permanent reach, benefitting many more children than direct support alone. In the process of developing our Theory of Change, AfriKids identified some priority changes it wants to help bring to these systems. These sub-goals are not detailed in the summary diagram because of lack of space, but form the basis for activities aiming to create systemic change in each of our Programme strategies:

• Improved educational quality: better implementation

of government and community mechanisms to support vulnerable children; better government monitoring; more equipped teachers; and improved infrastructure.

• Improved protective environment: functioning

community systems to protect and support children (child labour committees, right to life advocates); and fathers, mothers and community providing guidance and support for children.

• Improved quality of health care services: Increased

infrastructure and improved capacity of health workers to provide quality services.

• Improved economic environment: better markets to support small businesses.

• Improved organisational skills and influence: so AfriKids can contribute to this impact.

Our Theory of Change diagram highlights our key stakeholder groups: community and government and private institutions, and within those, the stakeholders that are most critical, i.e. have the most power to influence our work.

© AfriKids 2017 | Theory of Change

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Registered Charity No: 1141028

How we facilitate change Approach The consultations, learning review and workshops that were held to develop this Theory of Change examined how AfriKids works and which aspects of its approach are most important and effective. The following components of AfriKids’ approach were distilled from information gathered as the most essential and those that should be central to all Programme plans.

Firm principles

• Strengthening existing groups and structures. Balancing direct support with systemic change

• Filling in gaps in provision while working out longer term solutions.

• Providing educational and livelihood support for the vulnerable.

• Building strategic partnerships with government, the private sector and NGOs for reach and sustainability.

Though AfriKids’ work is varied and has evolved over the years, its principles have remained firm and run through all areas of the organisation and its work. The organisation has a number of defined principles, including on how we fundraise and communicate, but perhaps the most significant relating to our Programmes are three fundamental rules to our approach: to listen, empower and sustain. These principles under-gird everything our Programmes do. We do not assume we know, but listen and empower others to ensure that the work is sustainable and continues even after AfriKids exits.

Strengthening and influencing government

Quality local staff

Supporting Systems

Underpinning our achievements is the fact that AfriKids is locally-led and embedded in the community with knowledgeable and dedicated local staff. Our work is successful because communities know that projects are not initiated by foreigners but based on strong relationships with staff that listen to and respect them, understand their values and practices and are responsive to local needs. This means that communities take more responsibility for their own development and the impact is therefore more sustainable.

Key methodologies We have learned that the following four ways of working are most effective in achieving our goals and will be our main approaches going forward, providing a framework for Programme planning: Building children and youth engagement and influence

• Equipping children with knowledge of their rights and responsibilities (Child Right Clubs).

• Involving children in planning, action, influencing government and monitoring.

• Ongoing counselling and monitoring. Building community responsibility and ownership

• Involving community in identifying root causes.

• Building the capacity of government staff and systems. • Influencing district budgets to support desired systemic changes.

• Improving implementation of government policies and schemes.

• Increasing partnerships and cooperation between governments and the people they serve.

In order to be effective in our approach, we also need strong support systems:

• Effective governance: good leadership with strong transparency and accountability.

• Organisation development: A clear and measurable strategy, monitoring, evaluation and learning (MEL) framework and staff skills.

• AfriKids UK support: its role has been critical especially in connecting us to people and groups, thus extending our influence; and in UK funding partnerships.

• Funding: a core facet of AfriKids’ approach is to promote sustainability, and this includes finding ways to fund our work that are as secure and sustainable as possible. While international aid funding is currently the most reliable and cost effective income stream, others include

• Establishing businesses that help fulfil our

programmatic objectives whilst also generating funds

• Programmes seeking ways to fund their objectives without aid

• Continuous investment and innovation in alternative fundraising

• Sensitising them in culturally relevant ways (collaboration not confrontation)

© AfriKids 2017 | Theory of Change

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Registered Charity No: 1141028

Looking forward This clear framework serves as a constant reminder of what we are ultimately trying to achieve and sets parameters for the programmes we develop. What we have learned Much of our approach rests on strong evidence from our own experiences, our beneficiaries and communities and from external learning. The Theory of Change process has helped us better understand the importance of more systematically engaging children and young people in the process – something that has happened more intuitively until now. It has also shown us the need to intensify our work to influence government systems and policies in addition to building its staff capacity if we are to have greater reach and sustainability. An outstanding question, however, is how we can most effectively balance direct support - particularly of livelihood and educational support - with systemic change interventions. While our direct support projects have brought valuable, sustainable changes to the lives of thousands of individuals, they are also costly and intensive bigger changes to fewer lives when compared with the vast and longer-term reach of programmes that create systemic change.

Next steps Continuing on from this project, we will explore this conflict carefully, to find the right balance between our duty of care to those most in need, and our professional responsibility to ensure value for money and commitment to tackling issues at the root (i.e. by making systemic changes) for sustainable development for all. Striking this balance between prevention and cure will enable us to help more people than ever without compromising the integrity or quality that are the cornerstones of our success. This Theory of Change will be an essential tool in guiding our strategy and programme plans. Northern Ghana is an area with much need for support, and as a household name, AfriKids receives requests for support every day. This clear framework serves as a constant reminder of what we are ultimately trying to achieve; how we can ensure the safety, education and health of children at risk in northern Ghana. It also provides clear goals and parameters for the programmes we develop, ensuring we remain focused, effective and can continue to measure our progress towards this aim.

Š AfriKids 2017 | Theory of Change

For more information, please see our current strategy, available on our website: www.afrikids.org or contact us: info@afrikids.org

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