Adaptive Planning, Monitoring, and Evaluation for Long-Term Impact: Insights From a Water Supply Case in Bangladesh

Most water and development interventions aim to contribute to long-term sustainable impacts. Given the uncertainties involved in these longer-term water development projects, adaptive planning approaches hold promise to connect planning, implementation and evaluation. Recent innovations report promi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Niki Versteeg, Leon M. Hermans, Sara Ahrari, Bartel A. Van De Walle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Water
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frwa.2020.621971/full
id doaj-dd52ab19f5f14b96bab118078a6f3fb9
record_format Article
spelling doaj-dd52ab19f5f14b96bab118078a6f3fb92021-04-02T15:50:03ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Water2624-93752021-01-01210.3389/frwa.2020.621971621971Adaptive Planning, Monitoring, and Evaluation for Long-Term Impact: Insights From a Water Supply Case in BangladeshNiki Versteeg0Leon M. Hermans1Leon M. Hermans2Sara Ahrari3Bartel A. Van De Walle4Bartel A. Van De Walle5Multi-Actor Systems Department, Faculty Technology, Policy and Management, Delft University of Technology, Delft, NetherlandsMulti-Actor Systems Department, Faculty Technology, Policy and Management, Delft University of Technology, Delft, NetherlandsLand and Water Management Department, IHE Delft Institute for Water Education, Delft, NetherlandsSimavi, Amsterdam, NetherlandsMulti-Actor Systems Department, Faculty Technology, Policy and Management, Delft University of Technology, Delft, NetherlandsUNU-MERIT, Maastricht, NetherlandsMost water and development interventions aim to contribute to long-term sustainable impacts. Given the uncertainties involved in these longer-term water development projects, adaptive planning approaches hold promise to connect planning, implementation and evaluation. Recent innovations report promising results, but find limited wide-spread practice due to a relatively large distance from current operational realities. Therefore, in this article we set out to investigate the real-world benefits and barriers for adaptive planning, monitoring and evaluation as a tool for water development interventions. To do so, we have stripped the advanced theoretic adaptive planning approach to its essentials, for exploration in an ongoing water development project. Application of the resulting three essential adaptive planning steps to a water development project in Khulna, Bangladesh shows that these steps are feasible and can support a more adaptive planning and management. In particular, they have helped to surface critical assumptions and uncertainties, as well as associated adaptation actions for the case. These were related to spatial development, water quality, finance, and management capacity. However, results also show that the actual use of the proposed steps is likely to be hindered by strategic misrepresentation. Our findings suggest this as an additional and more fundamental barrier to the widespread use of adaptive planning practices. We reflect on this barrier of strategic misrepresentation and on possible mechanisms to counter it, in order to enable water development actors to make their planning and evaluation arrangements more adaptive.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frwa.2020.621971/fulladaptive planningwater and developmentwater supplyBangladeshevaluation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Niki Versteeg
Leon M. Hermans
Leon M. Hermans
Sara Ahrari
Bartel A. Van De Walle
Bartel A. Van De Walle
spellingShingle Niki Versteeg
Leon M. Hermans
Leon M. Hermans
Sara Ahrari
Bartel A. Van De Walle
Bartel A. Van De Walle
Adaptive Planning, Monitoring, and Evaluation for Long-Term Impact: Insights From a Water Supply Case in Bangladesh
Frontiers in Water
adaptive planning
water and development
water supply
Bangladesh
evaluation
author_facet Niki Versteeg
Leon M. Hermans
Leon M. Hermans
Sara Ahrari
Bartel A. Van De Walle
Bartel A. Van De Walle
author_sort Niki Versteeg
title Adaptive Planning, Monitoring, and Evaluation for Long-Term Impact: Insights From a Water Supply Case in Bangladesh
title_short Adaptive Planning, Monitoring, and Evaluation for Long-Term Impact: Insights From a Water Supply Case in Bangladesh
title_full Adaptive Planning, Monitoring, and Evaluation for Long-Term Impact: Insights From a Water Supply Case in Bangladesh
title_fullStr Adaptive Planning, Monitoring, and Evaluation for Long-Term Impact: Insights From a Water Supply Case in Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Adaptive Planning, Monitoring, and Evaluation for Long-Term Impact: Insights From a Water Supply Case in Bangladesh
title_sort adaptive planning, monitoring, and evaluation for long-term impact: insights from a water supply case in bangladesh
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Water
issn 2624-9375
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Most water and development interventions aim to contribute to long-term sustainable impacts. Given the uncertainties involved in these longer-term water development projects, adaptive planning approaches hold promise to connect planning, implementation and evaluation. Recent innovations report promising results, but find limited wide-spread practice due to a relatively large distance from current operational realities. Therefore, in this article we set out to investigate the real-world benefits and barriers for adaptive planning, monitoring and evaluation as a tool for water development interventions. To do so, we have stripped the advanced theoretic adaptive planning approach to its essentials, for exploration in an ongoing water development project. Application of the resulting three essential adaptive planning steps to a water development project in Khulna, Bangladesh shows that these steps are feasible and can support a more adaptive planning and management. In particular, they have helped to surface critical assumptions and uncertainties, as well as associated adaptation actions for the case. These were related to spatial development, water quality, finance, and management capacity. However, results also show that the actual use of the proposed steps is likely to be hindered by strategic misrepresentation. Our findings suggest this as an additional and more fundamental barrier to the widespread use of adaptive planning practices. We reflect on this barrier of strategic misrepresentation and on possible mechanisms to counter it, in order to enable water development actors to make their planning and evaluation arrangements more adaptive.
topic adaptive planning
water and development
water supply
Bangladesh
evaluation
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frwa.2020.621971/full
work_keys_str_mv AT nikiversteeg adaptiveplanningmonitoringandevaluationforlongtermimpactinsightsfromawatersupplycaseinbangladesh
AT leonmhermans adaptiveplanningmonitoringandevaluationforlongtermimpactinsightsfromawatersupplycaseinbangladesh
AT leonmhermans adaptiveplanningmonitoringandevaluationforlongtermimpactinsightsfromawatersupplycaseinbangladesh
AT saraahrari adaptiveplanningmonitoringandevaluationforlongtermimpactinsightsfromawatersupplycaseinbangladesh
AT bartelavandewalle adaptiveplanningmonitoringandevaluationforlongtermimpactinsightsfromawatersupplycaseinbangladesh
AT bartelavandewalle adaptiveplanningmonitoringandevaluationforlongtermimpactinsightsfromawatersupplycaseinbangladesh
_version_ 1721558943103188992