1.Introduction
Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA) Rwanda is seeking to hire the services of a qualified consultancy firm to conduct a final evaluation of the fourth phase of its Public Policy Information Monitoring and Advocacy (PPIMA) programme in Rwanda.
1.1 Overview and rationale
The Public Policy Information, Monitoring and Advocacy (PPIMA) is a programme implemented by Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA) and funded by the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (Norad), the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida), Swiss Development Cooperation (SDC) and Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs through its Project Office in Rwanda. PPIMA is a civil society support programme aimed at strengthening Rwandan civil society organisations (CSOs) and citizens to participate in and influence the formulation and implementation of national and local policymaking, planning and governance. As a programme, PPIMA started in 2009 and has been implemented through four phases which cumulatively span for almost fifteen years. Being implemented currently is PPIMA IV, from 2020 to end of 2024.
1.2 PPIMA IV summary and anticipated outcomes
The programme’s intended goal is to ensure that Rwandan citizens live in a democratic society with equitable social justice; that all citizens of Rwanda, including the vulnerable groups, have equal access to their economic, political, and social rights.
The 2020-2024 PPIMA Programme Phase IV is being implemented in collaboration with 20 local CSO partners across 19 Districts[1] and continues to focus its efforts on strengthening CSO partners internal governance systems, their ability to advocate, influence and conduct research and form policy while promoting citizen participation and priorities through a Community Score Card (CSC) model. The programme also aims to promote accountability among decision makers and specifically encourage them to consult their constituents to inform decisions, be responsive to citizens’ concerns, including a gender perspective in planning and budgeting and address the specific needs of vulnerable and marginalized groups.
The following outcomes are anticipated during PPIMA Phase IV:
Outcome 1: Partners are more effective in their public policy and advocacy work to influence and mobilize in recognition that an empowered civil society is a fundamental pillar of sustainable democracy.
Outcome 2: Supporting citizens’ engagement in decision-making processes, knowledge of their rights, and access to justice and conflict prevention and management mechanisms.
Outcome 3: Local and national government have formulated policies and plans that reflect the concerns raised by citizens and gender equality considerations.
2. Objectives of the assignment
The main objective of the commissioned final evaluation is to assess and determine the fulfilment of PPIMA IV objectives and intended outcomes against the OECD DACC six evaluation criteria namely relevance, coherence, effectiveness, efficiency, impact, and sustainability.
More specifically, the final evaluation will seek to:
3. Scope of work
The scope of work will include but is not limited to:
4. Relevance of the assignment and potential use of the findings
The findings and recommendations from the final evaluation of PPIMA IV will be used to:
5. Preferred methodology
It is expected that the evaluation team will propose an overall evaluation design/plan to address the evaluation questions and a plan for collecting and analysing data. The evaluation design shall be based on qualitative techniques to address the evaluation questions. Key informant interviews, focus group interviews, in-depth review of PPIMA documentation and reports, discussions with PPIMA staff and feedback from partners and beneficiaries are among the techniques that the evaluation team shall consider when addressing the evaluation questions.
The plan shall include a detailed work plan, schedule and an overview of questions, a presentation of the method and a basic layout of the following considerations:
6. Key deliverables and timelines
The execution of the commissioned assignment will run from September to November 2024, and the final evaluation report should be submitted by 15th November 2024. It is in overall anticipated that the execution of this assignment will take up to a maximum of 32 cumulative days distributed per key deliverables described below. Interested service provider (consultant) must include the work plan and time schedule for executing this assignment in their technical proposal (offer), separately submitted from the financial offer.
Inception report and evaluation design (7 days): The evaluation team will review the relevant project documents, including considering the emerging findings of the ongoing Outcome Harvesting and the Community Score Card (CSC) Impact Study and produce an inception report or background report that addresses what the evaluation team has learned based on program documents.
The inception report will, at minimum, include the design of the evaluation with the following details: i) a detailed evaluation design matrix; ii) draft questionnaires and other data collection instruments or their principal features; iii) the list of potential interviewees and sites to be visited; iv) identified limitations to the evaluation design, and v) an updated schedule. The inception report should be submitted within two weeks from contract signing. Any revisions to the questions in the inception report should be documented in writing in the evaluation report and are subject to pre-approval by the quality assurance team of NPA.
Pre-Field work briefings (2 days): Following the signing of the contract and before undertaking fieldwork, the evaluation team will hold a series of in-house briefing sessions as per need to discuss the team’s understanding of the assignment, initial assumptions, evaluation questions, methodology, and work plan, and to clarify any questions or logistic needs. These series of sessions will involve NPA programme team and partners. Donors will be consulted and involved as appropriate.
Evaluation Briefing/Presentation (5 days): Drawing on the emerging findings, the evaluation team is expected to hold a series of briefing sessions and preliminary presentations after field work and following the submission of the first draft. The draft final evaluation report presentation will discuss the summary of findings and recommendations with Sida, SDC and Norad within not more than 15 business days following the conclusion of fieldwork.
Draft Evaluation Report (15 days): The submission date for the draft evaluation report will be determined in the evaluation work plan, considering the number of days required to produce the draft evaluation report and address all comments is estimated to be a maximum of 15 days.
Final Evaluation Report (3 days): The evaluation team will take no more than 3 business days to respond/incorporate the final comments from Sida, SDC, DPO and Norad. The evaluation team leader will then submit the final report.
7. Supervision and quality assurance
The successful consultancy firm will have the primary responsibility for ensuring high quality standards of the evaluation process and related deliverables. The firm will functionally report to NPA Programme Team on basis of a contact and communication tree to be later unveiled during the contracting process.
8. Desired profile of the service provider
The ideal local or international consultancy firm will need to prove that they have been into the consultancy business for at least five consecutive years and that they are specialised in evaluative studies on governance matters in Africa and preferably in Rwanda. To this end, they shall submit, as part of their offer, at least two most recent certificates of good completion and at least two contact details of references who know the quality of their work and can therefore testify to their technical and ethical competence.
International companies must demonstrate that they have previous work experience in Rwanda and prove their understanding of local context. It is mandatory, however, that the international firms must identify and partner with an experienced local firm or local expert (s) who have good understanding of Rwandan governance context. To this end, a teaming or partnership agreement/statement dully signed by all parties must be incorporated as part of their application.
For local consultancy firms, their application must be accompanied by a certificate of registration, valid RRA tax clearance and RSSB compliance certificate. The international consultancy firms must submit a proof of valid business registration issued by a competent authority in the country of incorporation and other relevant certifications (e.g. taxes and social security clearances) by competent authorities either in Rwanda or in their country of registration.
The bidding company (firm) will provide a team of experts comprised of a minimum of two key positions among others: (i) a Team Leader who is a renowned expert in programme/projects evaluation and ii) a specialist in Governance, Civic Participation and Capacity Building. All team members filling the two key positions are expected to have strong understanding of working on voice empowerment and accountability processes involving citizens, civil society organisations, governments, and development partners (DPs) in sub-Saharan Africa. Prior experience in Rwanda is desirable and mandatory only for the team leader. They will also be required to provide a signed statement attesting to a lack of conflict of interest or describing any existing conflict of interest.
The Team Leader (TL) will need to be physically present in Rwanda during the evaluation period and will be ultimately responsible for the following:
The Governance and Civic Participation expert will be tasked to:
9. Procurement method
This tender follows a competitive tendering method and is open to both local and international consultancy companies that have the desired profile as described under section 8.
10. Evaluation criteria and scoring
A quality-based selection method that prioritises the soundness of the technical offer will carry more weight over the pricing indicated in the financial offer. NPA reserves the right though not to award the tender to the best technical offer in case no middle ground about the pricing negotiations can be reached or in case the entity emerging as best offeror did not pass the due diligence.
Technical offer:
Description
Quality soundness of the technical offer in terms of the proposed methodology and how it relevantly addresses all the study objectives as well as the different elements of scope of work.
Weightage
40%
Description
Suitability of expertise of the proposed core team
Weightage
15%
Description
Experience of implementing similar work with development organizations (15%)
Weightage
15%
Description
Sufficiently detailed financial proposal in EUR (consultant fees, clear breakdown of activity costs, travel costs, etc.)
Weightage
30%
11. General Terms and Conditions
All rights reserved to Norwegian People’s Aid. NPA reserves all right to reject all applications not fulfilling the requirements associated to this request. NPA will not be responsible or liable for any cost and time allocated by applicants to the preparation and submission of Expressions of Interest. NPA reserves the right to engage other companies or individual consultants if required.
Any conflict of Interest involving an applicant must be fully disclosed to NPA. When failed to discose any conflict of interest, the application will be disqualfied and no award will be made in such case.