| Title | Chapter 1: Inequality through the evaluation lens |
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| Contributor | Steven Masvaure(editor) |
| DOI | https://doi.org/10.4102/aosis.2023.BK459.01 |
| Landing page | https://books.aosis.co.za/index.php/ob/catalog/book/459 |
| License | https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ |
| Copyright | Steven Masvaure, Takunda J Chirau, Tebogo Fish & Candice Morkel (eds.). Licensee: AOSIS (Pty) Ltd. The moral right of the editors and authors has been asserted. |
| Publisher | AOSIS |
| Print length | 16 pages |
| Language | English (Original) |
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Steven Masvaure is a senior evaluation technical specialist at CLEAR-AA, Wits, South Africa. He holds a PhD in Development Studies. Masvaure possesses more than fifteen years of working experience as a researcher and evaluator in the development sector across several African countries.
Tebogo Fish is a researcher at CLEAR-AA, hosted by the Faculty of Commerce, Law and Management (CLM) at the University of the Witwatersrand. She holds an MA in Research Psychology and has been working in the M&E field for seven years. Her research interests include social issues in Africa, such as poverty, unemployment, inequality, education and skills development, as well as indigenous and equitable evaluation for transformative change in Africa.
Samukelisiwe Mkhize is a researcher at the CLEAR-AA, Wits, South Africa. She holds an MA in Policy and Development Studies from the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN). Mkhize has previous work experience in climate adaptation and mitigation in smallholder systems as well as supporting the development of climate-smart agriculture decision support systems. Her current research interests are around the conceptualisation of climate justice in complex socio-ecological systems and public policy responses to climate adaptation and mitigation in Africa.
Takunda J Chirau is the Deputy Director at CLEAR-AA and leads the Evaluation Systems Programme at the Centre. Takunda has a PhD in Sociology from Rhodes University. Takunda has been working in the monitoring and evaluation (M&E) discipline and has practised for over twelve years now. Taku has conducted several National Evaluation Capacity Development (NECD) activities. Some of these activities have been through respective UNICEF country office and East and Southern Africa Regional Office. His contributions in the M&E discipline and profession are evidenced in countries of Kenya, Uganda, Zambia, Lesotho, Namibia, Botswana, Tanzania, Liberia and Zimbabwe, to mention a few. He is a board member of SAMEA.
Candice Morkel is a global leader in the evaluation sector and the director of the Centre for Learning on Evaluation and Results, Anglophone Africa (CLEAR-AA). Morkel has 26 years of experience in government, academia and the non-profit sector, specialising in public sector governance and monitoring and evaluation. She leads CLEAR-AA’s work in building national evaluation systems through institution building and capacity development. Morkel holds a PhD in Public Administration.