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Canada’s approach to innovation in international assistance

This guidance note sets out ¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ’s approach to innovation in international assistance, which includes international development, humanitarian assistance, and peace and security initiatives. The guidance note contributes to the implementation of the 2017  and is a key part of ¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ’s commitment to innovation and experimentation. These efforts support gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls as the right thing to do and the smart way to reduce poverty and inequality.

The overall objective of this guidance note is to encourage and guide efforts to develop, test and integrate innovations in Canada’s international assistance.

This note establishes the framework for the development of practical guidance and tools to empower staff and partners. It creates systems to track and measure the impact of innovation to generate learning and evidence in support of decision making that benefits the poorest and most vulnerable, including women and girls.

Introduction

Canada committed to advancing “innovation, research and results” and “encouraging greater experimentation and scaling-up of new solutions to development challenges” in the Feminist International Assistance Policy.

This is a commitment consistent with:

It also requires:

  • bold and transformative action by the global community;
  • building inclusive innovation approaches into international assistance programming;
  • ¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ to foster a culture of innovation, encourage learning across its sectors and streams, and share lessons on innovation with other governmental and non-governmental partners; and
  • partners to ensure that women and girls are involved in the innovation process both as beneficiaries and as innovators in their own right.

Case for action

The global ambition to eradicate extreme poverty as outlined in Agenda 2030 will not succeed with business-as-usual approaches. We need groundbreaking improvements to existing service delivery, products and policies. We also need new partnerships and funding modalities, including public-private cooperation, to deliver more efficient and effective international assistance at the scale required.

Fast-paced social, political, economic and technological change

It is a commitment to innovation using evidence and experimentation to approach international development differently. Doing so is pivotal to reach sustained, scalable and practical solutions to the world’s complex development problems.

Positioning ¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ for pioneering solutions

By building on aid effectiveness principles and encouraging collaboration across sectors, ¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ will work to accelerate the pace of change to improve livelihoods for the poorest and most vulnerable.

Innovation can help transition successful international assistance programming by:

  • Creating partnerships to close resourcing gaps;
  • Facilitating experimentation and data collection to create strong evidence bases;
  • Identifying pathways to transition successful pilots to scale; and
  • Scaling tested solutions that challenge gender inequality and remove barriers to empowering women and girls.

What is innovation in international assistance?

Definition

For ¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ, innovation in international assistance is a process and mindset. This means we will work to enable new or improved locally driven solutions for better results and greater impact, which benefit and empower the poorest and most vulnerable, including women and girls. Innovative solutions can include business models, policy practices, approaches, partnerships, technologies, behavioural insights and ways of delivering products and services.

These are key factors to consider when identifying development innovation:

  1. What is the specific problem?
  2. Is the solution locally driven?
  3. Is the solution new or improved in the local context?
  4. Does the solution have the potential to address a problem(s) more efficiently or effectively than existing practices?
  5. Will the solution be tested, piloted and/or scaled?

¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ’s approach to innovation in international assistance

Both how and what

The aim of innovation in international assistance is to find and adopt concrete solutions that address problems more effectively and efficiently than existing approaches. It also aims to address needs that have not yet been met, such as addressing power dynamics in local cultures that systematically disadvantage women and girls.

New and improved

Innovation in international assistance can be either transformational (i.e. an entirely new solution to a problem) or incremental (i.e. an improvement to an existing solution to make it more effective and/or efficient).

A dynamic and flexible process

The innovation process is supported by a methodology that can include, but is not limited to, ideation, research and development, experimentation, testing, adjusting, adapting to local context, building proof of concept, and transitioning to scale and scaling.

Not all international assistance initiatives need to be innovative as proven and existing solutions may often be the most effective intervention to bring about further impact. A commitment to experimentation and evaluation can help guide such choices, helping to identify where initiatives are reaching optimal levels of impact and where doing things differently might offer greater potential.

Paths to effectiveness

¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ will focus its efforts on the following eight paths to effectiveness, which reflect and underpin the G7 Whistler Principles in practice.

1. Promote inclusive innovation

Feminist and gender-based-analysis-plus approaches are central to such efforts and can provide critical new entry points and orientations for both engagement and programming.

Women and girls should be engaged as both those who benefit from innovation and people to be supported with tools and resources as innovators themselves.

In addition, promoting inclusive innovation includes these considerations:

  • Support international assistance policies and programs that are grounded in a human rights-based approach that highlights equality, non-discrimination, participation, inclusion, intersectionality, transparency and accountability.
  • Ensure inclusive innovation by taking into consideration various identity, social, economic and political factors that affect the outcomes of innovative solutions for particular populations, including women and girls.
  • Ensure that marginalized groups are not excluded from the benefits of innovation or negatively affected by innovations.

Case study:

In this project, the Digital Opportunity Trust (DOT) sought to broach the endemic challenges of slow job creation, skills gaps, and inequality of opportunity and resource access for women and men in Africa and the Middle East.

The DOT strategy was to develop and deploy entrepreneurial and digital job skills programming in pilot countries that incorporates a comprehensive gender equality strategy, networks of mentors for women and girls, and the use of digital peer-to-peer platforms.

As a result, support has been delivered to over 46,000 young women and men, with more than a third of them launching or growing their own businesses.

2. Invest in locally driven solutions

Support and encourage local innovators and their partners in developing countries, including by sharing talent and resources from global networks with them.

In addition:

  • Proactively identify and nurture local expertise and experience on development innovation, creating knowledge and best-practice synergies.
  • Ensure that women and adolescent girls, including those with disabilities, and local organizations representing them, play a decisive role in the design, testing, learning and adoption of innovative solutions. 

Case study: Canada’s Support for the Fight Against Sexual and Gender-Based Violence

Sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) is endemic in refugee camps and in protection sites in South Sudan, Somalia and Kenya.

Ujamaa Africa provides SGBV prevention training by using separate, gender-sensitive curriculums to train men and boys and women and girls in a six-week intensive course. For men and boys, the focus is on consent and how to stop SGBV if they witness it. The program, entitled Empowerment and Self-Defence, empowers women and girls by teaching them what to do if they are attacked.

The sexual violence prevention curriculum is being scaled up from a pilot in Dadaab, Kenya, and delivered in Kenya, South Sudan and Somalia. Communities in which Ujamaa Africa facilitated its education program have reported a 50% decrease in sexual abuse.

3. Take intelligent risks

Proceed by experimenting and using rigorous data. Ensure that we do no harm, and invest more boldly once initial steps yield stronger evidence of demonstrated impact and financial viability through proof of concept.

In addition:

  • Enhance data collection to support intelligent risk-taking, ongoing learning and pivoting when necessary.
  • Explore funding models to distribute and manage risk in ways that mobilize innovative partnership.
  • Leverage new sources of funding, and offer pathways to scale, including through results-based payments and other mechanisms enabled by ¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ’s expanded terms and conditions for international assistance.

4. Use evidence, including disaggregated data, to drive decision making

Use evidence to improve impact and cost-effectiveness by developing clear metrics early on. Measure progress against milestones on an ongoing basis to help identify the most-effective innovations and the remaining gaps.

In addition:

  • Strive to identify data that international assistance actors may be overlooking and that may illuminate entry points to address underlying barriers to international assistance or challenges to new solutions.
  • Address the challenges of measuring the impact and value of innovation and its results and share relevant knowledge with Canadian and international partners and stakeholders.

5. Seize opportunities to learn quickly, iterate and ensure the impact of promising innovations

Before scaling promising innovations, acknowledge failure and inefficiencies. Apply an innovation lens to proven practices to identify when they need adjustment.

In addition:

  • Work with partners to integrate and support innovation throughout the project cycle (definition of the problem, analysis, engagement, assessment, consultation, design, testing, experimentation, implementation, monitoring, evaluation and reporting).
  • Learn alongside partners, experts and beneficiaries to shape future experimentation and innovation.
  • Adapt corporate and project-management systems to enable iteration and learning.

6. Facilitate collaboration and co-creation across public, private and civil society sectors

Coordinate the application of scientific, technical, social and business innovations to leverage intellectual, financial and social resources from all and share data, standards, results and learning widely.

In addition:

  • Encourage work across sectors and through new partnerships to disrupt silos, including among other ¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ initiatives.
  • Encourage the adoption of innovative approaches through multilateral, bilateral and multi-stakeholder engagement on international assistance and use new partnership and funding mechanisms to support these.

7. Identify scalable solutions, including technologies

These should demonstrate high potential to achieve and sustain significant impact and cost-effectiveness and open the potential to reach millions of people in need in developing countries.

In addition:

  • Stay informed about emerging tools and approaches to understand how they might be relevant to Canada’s international assistance work.
  • Encourage and support multi-stakeholder collaboration to scale promising innovations with development, technology, finance, the private sector and research actors.

8. Integrate proven innovations into programming to bring to scale

By removing barriers to using new programming solutions and by supporting the adoption of proven innovations across programming mechanisms, ¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ can continue building an enabling environment for innovation for staff. It can encourage innovation by partners in Canada and across the international assistance sector so that effective innovation for impact becomes everyone’s business.

In addition:

  • Ensure that ¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ has the financial mechanisms and authorities to support innovation in its international assistance.
  • Experiment with and learn from new or improved models for policy and programming work (this could include, but is not limited to, such models as human-centred and gender-inclusive design and co-creation).
  • Recognize and establish internal pathways to transition to scale across programming channels for successful concepts and proven solutions. 

Case study:

In this project, Grand Challenges Canada sought to improve access to menstrual health products for women from rural and low-income households in East Africa.

The organization created Sustainable Health Enterprises, which sought to empower women by providing small loans for materials (locally grown banana fibres) to produce menstrual products for sale in underserved areas. As a consequence, the project has created new ecosystems of business transactions while improving access to essential health products.

The project has been scaled to new regions in Rwanda, and there are plans to expand to Kenya, Nepal and Zimbabwe.

Implementation and monitoring

¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ will develop practical implementation, monitoring and evaluation guidance tools for staff and partners. It will encourage and support staff members in fostering a culture of inclusive innovation throughout the department’s development, humanitarian, and peace and security programs.

¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ will systematically track, measure and disseminate results of innovative solutions in the delivery of international assistance to generate knowledge and learning to support evidence-based decision making, including through Partner Reporting Guidelines. ¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ is collaborating with the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s Development Assistance Committee Secretariat and its members on the development of an innovation marker to track innovation across all programming projects. This, along with work on measuring impact, will enable mechanisms to track, report and disseminate results and learning on innovation.

Conclusion

Innovations in international assistance enable proven solutions that address challenges and barriers to gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls more effectively than existing practices and improve the lives of the poorest and most vulnerable.

For ¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ, a commitment to innovation is pivotal to reach practical, sustained, and scalable solutions to the world’s complex international assistance problems and to eliminate extreme poverty by 2030.

Consistent with the Feminist International Assistance Policy, such a commitment includes a specific recognition that unlocking the potential of women and adolescent girls as innovators can transform development.

¶¶ÒùÊÓƵ will continue to encourage its partners to seek inclusive and innovative solutions to build a more peaceful, inclusive and prosperous world.

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