Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Evaluation of the
Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and
Institutional Plan 2008-2013
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| | | | | | ||||||||| |||||||
| | | | | ||| r a t i o n a l F r a m e w o r k
||||||
|||||
| | | | ||| d O pe Enhan |||||
| | | a n c e d |
| ||| | | |
a ti v e
A 6: E x c e l l e n c e i n M a n a g emen
t
N or m ||||||||
| | E . FOC ativ ||
| | | |||| Norm U S A R F O C U S A U S e Cr
| C ||||||| | R EA 5: an os
||| ||| ced || FO | | ||| | | | | | | | S tren
A R EA d O s-
a n | | | | | | | | | | g t p
6: e
h ||||| ||||| S AREA 4: Environ hen
|||| |||||
cu
|||| FOCU ed Ex r
tti
| men
|| |||
||
|
|||| En
| | | c
||||
at
ng Fram anage
| | | tall H
|||| ||||| um
ion
yS
||||
| | | | 3 : P r o m o t i o
Iss
| | | A n o
ell
||||
||| ||| RE f Pro ou a
al
||||
|
|||| SA
ue
nd
en
|
-po
|
|||||
|
| U
||||
| o
s C rk |||||||
|
n
||||
ce
| C B
||||
||| Planning, Manag rL a
FO
Se
|
|||||
rba n an
||||
|||||
in
|
ros
e
eme
||||
ttl
| | U d
|||
wo
:
||||
|
sic
||||||
M
|| 2 nt
|
|
em
|
|
|
s-cu
|
|
EA
|
|
itoring and Part an
|
|
Ur
|
||||
|
|
n
an
|||
||||||
|||||
ent
||||||
|||||
R o ner d
ba
M
|
|||||
A
dH
,
|
y
ttin
s
||||
|||||
c
s Fi
n In
h
|
ca
|
||||||||
ip
Go
|||||
||||||
ou
m
|
US
||||
vo
||||||||
|
|
|||||||
nan
g Iss
ve
ent.
|
fras
sin
|
||||||
|
OC
|
|
|
rn a
|||||||||
fo
|
||||||
d
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
g. F
:A
|
truct
c
rS
||| F
|
|||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
e Syst
|||||||||||
nce
ues ||||||||
|
A1
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
ust
|
OCUS
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
. FOC
a ina
|
OCUS ARE
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
b le Ur banizati
|
|
|
|
US AREA 2: U
|
|
|
AREA 3: Pr
|
|
||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
F
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||
omot
|
|
|||||
||
||||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||||
on.
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
|
|
|
||
|
|
|
|
rba
|
|
||||
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
ion
|
|
|
||| |
|
|
|
5
|
|||
||||
|
nP
|
|
|
||||||
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|
:
|||
||||||||
|
|
||||
|
AR
|
|||
|
||||
|
|
|
S
of
|
|
|
la
||||
|||||||
|
||||
||||
|
tr
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
nn
|
|
|||||
|
|
||
E
Pro
||||
|
|
eng
|
|| | |
|
|
||||
|
|
United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) |||
|
in g
|
A4
||||||
||||
|||
||||||
|
|||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||| |||
|
|
|||||
|||
|
|
|
,M ||||
|
|
|
po
|
||||
th
|
|
P. O. Box 30030, 00100 Nairobi GPO KENYA
|
|
:E
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ana
|||||
|
|
|
|
ene
|
|
rL
|
| ||||
|
e. |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
n
|
|||
Tel: 254-020-7623120 (Central Office)
|
gem
|
|
an
|
|
||||
|
c
|||||
|
vir
|
||
||||
||||
n |
||
|
|
a
d
da e nt and Govern |
|
|
on |||
|
|
|
|
|
|
www.unhabitat.org
|
|
|
|||||
Hu
|
|
|
||||
s.
| | | | ||||||| |||
|
nd
|
me
|||
||
|
|||
|
|||
| e
||||
H |
m
|
|||| |||||||
|
| c
|
ousin
|
an nta | i
|
g. |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
erv
|
|
||||
|
|
|
|
|||
|||| |||
|
||||
lly
|
Se
||
|
S |
||||
|
|
|
S d
||
|
||
|||| t
|
|||
|||
tle oun n
|
|
|
re a
||
|||| |
|
|| ||||
|
me d Bas
||
ic Urban Infrastructu
|
|||| ||||||| | | |
|
nts | | | |
|
||||| ||| |||
| |
||
|
|||| ||||||| | | | |||||
Fina
|||||| |||| |||||| |||
|||
n c e | | | | | | | | | | |
|||| ||
|||| |||||||| ||||||||||
|| Systems
. ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||| ||| |||
|||| ||||| ||||||| | | | | | ||||| |||||||| |||||||
||||||||| |||||| ||||| |||
||||
||||| |||||
|||||| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| | | | | ||||| | | | | ||||
||||| |||||||| | | |||||
|||||| ||||||||||| |||||||| |||||
|||||| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| | | | | |
|||||||| ||||
|||||||||||| ||||||||
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
HS/004/13E
ISBN(Series): 978-92-1-132028-2
ISBN (Volume): 978-92-1-132544-7
JULY 2012
Evaluation of the
Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and
Institutional Plan 2008-2013
July 2012
ii Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
HS/004/13E
ISBN (Series): 978-92-1-132028-2
ISBN (Volume): 978-92-1-132544-7
Disclaimer
The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this publication do not imply the expression of any
opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country,
territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers of boundaries.
Views expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect those of the United Nations Human Settlements
Programme, the United Nations, or its Member States.
Excerpts may be reproduced without authorization, on condition that the source is indicated.
Acknowledgements
Author: Per Kirkemann & Don Okpala
Editor: Nick Michell
Design & Layout: Andrew Ondoo
Table of Contents
PART 1: BACKGROUND .......................................................................................................................1
1. Introduction ................................................................................................................................................. 2
2. Evolution and Scope of UN-Habitat’s MTSIP 2008-2013 ............................................................................. 4
3. Approach and Methodology ....................................................................................................................... 8
3.1 Approach............................................................................................................................................................................... 8
3.2 Evaluation Questions.............................................................................................................................................................. 8
3.3 Methodology......................................................................................................................................................................... 9
3.4 Limitations........................................................................................................................................................................... 10
6.4 Focus Area 4: Environmentally Sound Basic Urban Infrastructure and Services........................................................................ 44
6.5 Focus Area 5: Strengthened Human Settlements Finance Systems.......................................................................................... 51
6.6 Focus Area 6: Excellence in Management.............................................................................................................................. 54
7. CROSSCUTTING ISSUES .............................................................................................................................. 62
7.1 Disaster Management.......................................................................................................................................................... 62
7.2 Gender Mainstreaming......................................................................................................................................................... 63
7.3 Urban Youth......................................................................................................................................................................... 65
8. ORGANIZATIONAL TRANSITION ................................................................................................................. 70
9. OBSERVATIONS ON THE STRATEGIC PLAN 2014-2019 ............................................................................... 72
ANNEXES ........................................................................................................................................90
SWOT Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and UNODC United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
Threats
WBI World Bank Institute
UNACLA United Nations Advisory Committee of
WFP World Food Programme
Local Authorities
WHO World Health Organization
UNBOA United Nations Board of Auditors
WOP Water Operators Partnership
UNCSD United Nations Conference on Sustainable
Development WSA Water and Sanitation for Africa
UNCDS United Nations Commission on Sustainable WSP-Af Water and Sanitation Programme for Africa
Development
Executive Summary
Highlights of MTSIP achievements made a promising start with advocacy, research and
by Focus Area tool development, GLTN now needs to upscale the
testing of tools at country level, increase its impact
Focus Area 1 Advocacy, monitoring and partner-
outside of Kenya, and find means to support this
ship for sustainable urbanization: Progress for all
new phase of activities.
its three expected accomplishments has been sat-
isfactory, although not all targets were met. As of Focus Area 4 Environmentally sound basic urban
December 2011 there was evidence that awareness infrastructure and services: Progress towards one
of sustainable urbanization at the global and na- of the expected accomplishments has been satis-
tional levels had increased. Press coverage of global factory, while progress on the other two has been
reports increased significantly with the State of the less than satisfactory. Surveys were not undertaken
World Cities report, while the number of parliamen- for two of the expected accomplishments’ targets
tary discussions of these reports has risen. There is due to resource constraints, which affected sources
evidence of improved global monitoring and aware- of information related to progress monitoring. An
ness among governments, local authorities and impact study was undertaken of UN-Habitat’s Wa-
other Habitat Agenda partners of human settlement ter and Sanitation Trust Fund from October 2009 to
conditions and trends. January 2010. The Water and Sanitation Trust Fund
was established in 2003 with the objective of bring-
Focus Area 2 Urban planning, management and
ing in new investment and ideas to expand the wa-
governance: Progress on all its three expected ac-
ter and sanitation coverage for poor urban dwellers.
complishments has been satisfactory. The targets for
The evaluation of the trust fund found that the suc-
Focus Area 2 have been surpassed in terms of the
cessful shift from pilot to sustainable service devel-
quantitative indicators. However, these do not cap-
opment requires additional project design features.
ture all the qualitative results achieved at the global,
The energy and transport components have grown
regional, and country level, for example, the num-
significantly with support from the Global Environ-
ber of institutions are counted, but the capacity built
ment Facility.
is not measured, and, there is limited information
on how the cities involved are actually implementing Focus Area 5 Strengthened human settlements
urban planning, management and governance. The finance systems: Progress on its two expected ac-
main emphasis has been on urban planning, urban complishments has been mixed. The initial concept
safety, climate change, and risk reduction. Focus of slum upgrading was to explore various ways of
Area 2 has stimulated discussions and work on ca- increasing financial resources for slum upgrading.
pacity development aspects that go beyond train- During the implementation phase, the grant pro-
ing, but more needs to be done to enhance long- gramme of the Slum Upgrading Facility (SUF), and
term institutional sustainability. to some extent the loan programme of the Exper-
imental Reimbursable Seeding Operation (ERSO),
Focus Area 3 Promotion of pro-poor land and hous-
focused on slum upgrading projects. However, it
ing: Progress on Focus Area 3 towards all its three
transpired during implementation that UN-Habitat
expected accomplishments has been satisfactory,
was not well placed to continue with ERSO as a di-
but the overall results of Focus Area 3 should take
rect lender, given the lack of continuous funding
the contributions of field projects and operations
for lending activities from external donors; and SUF
into account. Adoption of the results-based man-
proved unsuccessful in supporting municipalities in
agement approach has been a weak link, as some
mobilizing financing for infrastructure development.
of the indicators of achievements could have been
It was decided to cease the further operation of
better formulated to assess results vis-à-vis planned
Slum Upgrading Facility as of December 2011 and
activities. The Global Land Tool Network (GLTN) was
for ERSO to explore options for a partnership with a
launched in June 2006 with the goal to contribute
financial institution.
to poverty alleviation through land reform, improved
land management, and security of tenure. Having
x Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
Focus Area 6 Excellence in management: Progress Efforts to improve the coherence of the Agency’s
on its four expected accomplishments has been work on gender mainstreaming necessitated the
mixed. Progress has been slower than expected preparation and endorsement of the Gender Equal-
for most tasks. Staff skills are well aligned with the ity Action Plan (GEAP) in 2009 – as gender issues
MTSIP requirements, information and knowledge were not well articulated in the MTSIP. The GEAP
sharing has improved, and the time taken to con- is wide-ranging and ambitious. UN-Habitat’s short
duct business processes has been reduced. Growth policy brief on gender and disasters explicitly sets
in delivery and the overall programme volume put out the need to pay particular attention to ensure
additional pressure on staff. However, UN-Habitat women’s rights to land and property in the after-
has assessed that overall progress has been sat- math of crises. Work at country level should ac-
isfactory by taking all critical factors into account. tively seek to ensure that women’s rights to land are
A review of the organization was completed, fol- upheld in post-conflict situations and in countries
lowing-up on the Peer Review’s recommendations. where women’s rights are systematically abused.
Implementation of key reform decisions is on track, UN-Habitat’s Partnership Strategy has no provisions
which is intended to enhance coherence and effi- for guidance on partnership formation in the areas
ciency in obtaining results. There seems to be an of gender mainstreaming and women’s empower-
imbalance in the deployment of staff to regional ment.
offices. There is an overall improvement in the pro-
The Urban Youth Fund was set up in 2008 to sup-
grammatic alignment with the MTSIP Focus Areas
port youth-led initiatives and to complement the
and in adopting results-based management. The
Youth Empowerment Programme. Despite intensive
UN-Habitat income for the biennium increased sig-
work from the UN-Habitat secretariat, mobilizing
nificantly: the earmarked funds rose, whereas the
additional resources to the Urban Youth Programme
non-earmarked funds decreased.
has been very challenging. The operation of the Ur-
ban Youth Programme is almost totally dependent
Crosscutting Issues
on funding from the Government of Norway. Gen-
The MTSIP includes three main crosscutting issues erating greater understanding and political will to
that are mainstreamed into the six Focus Areas: di- attract a bigger donor base for the Urban Youth
saster management, gender mainstreaming, and Programme has been extremely difficult. The limited
urban youth. administrative and financial resources therefore in-
hibit in-depth monitoring of some of the projects
UN-Habitat has been an important player in the
sponsored by the programme.
area of disaster management, within the United Na-
tions system, particularly in its operational activities.
Organizational Transition
UN-Habitat is increasingly recognized as having
specific competence in urban issues and humani- An internal review of the organizational set-up led
tarian actors are seeking this expertise to improve to a restructuring of UN-Habitat’s organization, ef-
the quality of their programmes. Strengthened fective from January 2012. The main characteristics
UN-Habitat support for humanitarian challenges is of the new organizational structure are: i) a flatter
being provided to a number of countries, includ- matrix organization; ii) a project-based organiza-
ing Afghanistan, Haiti, Iraq, Pakistan, Occupied tion; iii) a flexible organization working through flex
Palestinian Territory, Somalia, Sri Lanka and Sudan. teams; iv) an organization with clear delegation of
UN-Habitat needs to continue augmenting its tech- authority down to the project level; and v) for exist-
nical human resources skills and competence for op- ing field projects and normative policy work to be
erating in complex urban and settlement contexts managed through a project-based accountability
in order to ensure that its normative comparative approach. The new structure consists of four offices
advantage in this area is fully operational. – Office of the Executive Director, Management Of-
fice, External Relations Office and Project Office –
and seven thematic branches. Perceptions among
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
xi
the staff on the organizational transition to the new national and local levels. However, it was found that
set-up were very diverse. Some saw the organiza- the concept of ‘sustainable urbanization’ needs to
tional changes as imperative for UN-Habitat to be be more clearly defined and guiding principles need
able to better deliver its goals, while others saw the to be developed. There has been a significant in-
changes as constraining their work. crease in UN-Habitat’s support to disaster-stricken
and post conflict countries, which today constitutes
Observations on the preparation of the a very large part of UN-Habitat’s project portfolio.
Strategic Plan 2014-2019 The relevance and catalytic effects of UN-Habitat’s
support increases when it is directed towards the
The Strategic Plan’s Focus Areas, which correspond
needs as identified by national and local stakehold-
to the seven proposed branches, are also the sub-
ers, and when the support is an integral part of the
-programmes in the 2014-2015 biennial strategic
United Nations Development Assistance Framework
framework, work programme and budget. The Stra-
(UNDAF) or Delivering as One process and is well
tegic Plan contains a results framework from which
coordinated with other development partners.
the subsequent work programmes will be derived
– thus ensuring that the reporting on the six-year
Strategic Plan and the biennial work programmes Effectiveness
are unified into a single process. The Strategic Plan The immediate objectives of the MTSIP are repre-
will be implemented in close cooperation and coor- sented in the targets set for 2013. A large part of
dination with other United Nations bodies/agencies these targets have been partially achieved and are
– with a view to avoiding overlapping and duplicat- likely to be fully met. As had been noted by the 2010
ing programmes and activities. A number of cross- Peer Review Report, there still seems to be over-con-
cutting issues, relevant to all seven Focus Areas in centration and too much reliance on numerical in-
the Plan will be prioritized, including outreach and dicators as measures of achievement, even for ac-
communication, gender, youth, partnerships, capac- tivities for which other types of indicators could be
ity development, and climate change. more appropriate. The outcome effects are not ap-
parent from the reported indicators. The long-term
III Conclusions development objectives are only loosely formulated
and thus more difficult to predict their realization.
The 2008-2011 MTSIP period The component of normative elements in country
level projects appears well balanced with those of
The opinion of many stakeholders is that the MT-
the operational elements. It appears that there is in-
SIP has been relevant for cooperating countries and
adequate feedback from the country level to Head-
has improved UN-Habitat’s performance. The MTSIP
quarters for the aggregation of achievements, accu-
has better rationalized and further sharpened the
mulation of knowledge and organizational learning.
programmatic focus of UN-Habitat, brought about
the better alignment of programmes, and played a
catalytic role in encouraging and enabling more pro- Efficiency
ductive partnerships, which in turn have helped in Despite financial and human resources constraints,
leveraging increased funding for the Agency’s pro- significant progress had been made in the imple-
grammes. mentation of most of the MTSIP Focus Areas. Of
special note is the progress made in the implemen-
Relevance tation of Focus Areas 1, 2, 4 and 6. High staff turn-
over affected MTSIP Programme implementation,
National and local stakeholders appreciate
especially in Focus Areas 3 and 5. Limited resource
UN-Habitat’s support on sustainable urbanization.
allocations from the United Nations Regular Bud-
This is demonstrated by the fact that UN-Habitat has
get and a small base of donor support, with largely
contributed to the formulation of national urban
earmarked funding, limits the scope of what the
policies, strategies, and development plans at both
Agency can do at Headquarters’ level. The fact
xii Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
that donors are hesitant with provision of non-ear- opment. In some countries the urban development
marked funding indicates that they wish to maintain challenges have been incorporated into national de-
some measure of control, which limits UN-Habitat’s velopment plans, which normally results in human
ability to prioritize its global agenda. and financial resources being allocated accordingly.
Recipient countries perceive UN-Habitat’s support
The point has been often made that one of the
for slum prevention and upgrading as contributing
reasons that implementation of the various Focus
positively to improving the slum dwellers’ situa-
Areas of the MTSIP could not be optimal was that
tion in the longer-term through pro-poor housing
there was not adequate time to prepare for its im-
policies, housing financing, and security of tenure,
plementation after it was formulated and adopted.
while short-term improvements will require sub-
The ENOF element of the MTSIP to support govern-
stantial capital injections. The MTSIP Action Plan’s
ments and their development partners to achieve
third phase – the scaling up phase – suggests that
more sustainable urbanization, has to some extent,
the volume of UN-Habitat’s support should have
improved coordination in UN-Habitat’s programme
increased significantly, which has not materialized.
implementation and management, but did not
Normative outcomes are likely to materialize further
quite provide the clarity that it originally intended.
during 2012-2013. Currently, limited information
The useful results framework was not accompanied
is available on the likely, intended and unintended,
with the allocation of adequate resources to enable
medium-term outcomes and impacts related to ur-
generation of the required baseline data, which is
ban social, economic, and physical achievements.
a widespread and major weak link in MTSIP assess-
ment of accomplishments.
Sustainability
UN-Habitat’s full participation in the UNDAF process The sustainability of UN-Habitat interventions re-
is hampered by the Agency’s low visibility among the lates to the extent to which these are requested by
other United Nations Agencies. However, in those national and local governments and supported by
countries where UN-Habitat succeeded in a mean- donors and other partners. Political support is also
ingful participation in the UNDAF process, more critical for the sustainability of UN-Habitat interven-
funding for UN-Habitat was accessed and synergies tions. The daunting challenge of resource adequacy
enhanced, which also resulted in increased visibility remains for implementing new initiatives and sus-
and voice. The role of the Habitat Programme Man- taining them. Development of systemic municipal
agers and the preparation of Habitat Country Pro- sources, such as municipal taxes, property taxes and
gramme Documents have enhanced UN-Habitat’s government subventions, would be more sustain-
role in the UNDAF process in some countries, but the able than current over-dependence on unpredict-
resources are inadequate to back up and advance able donor funding for urban services financing.
the Habitat Country Programme Documents. Even Impact evaluations at country level will be required
with limited resources the Habitat Programme Man- to determine the degree of sustainability.
agers have succeeded in creating relevant projects
and attracting earmarked donor funding for their
Coherence
implementation. Regional and country offices have
made the point that they are regularly not consulted In theory, there is good coherence between the six
or involved during the process of initiation, formula- Focus Areas, but in practice the potential coherence
tion and development of new global programmes. has been jeopardized by the inflexible cooperation
As has been seen in the revenue trends, donors ap- between the divisions that continue to persist at
pear keener on providing earmarked funding than Headquarters. In some of the Habitat country pro-
non-earmarked. grammes there has been good coherence between
the various Focus Areas for which interventions
Impact were implemented. In such cases it has been due
to the foresight of the UN-Habitat country teams.
MTSIP has already at this stage impacted on the Due to the imbalance in staff allocation between
countries’ policies, strategies, and capacity devel- the Headquarters and regional/country offices, the
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
xiii
V RECOMMENDATIONS Organization
The proposed recommendations are related to the 5. Management should review the new structure
remaining period of MTSIP (2012-2013) and the closely to assure its sustainability and substan-
Strategic Plan (2014-2019). The recommendations tive scope. The following organizational aspects
for the 2012-2013 biennium are aimed at improving should be considered: i) the policy function
the performance of MTSIP, but these will be equally should be evident in the organizational set-up;
valid for the 2014-2019 Strategic Plan period. The ii) establishment of an Environmental Man-
recommendations for the 2014-2019 Strategic Plan agement Unit; iii) establishment of a Disaster
should ideally be implemented prior to the launch of Management Unit; iv) establishment of a policy
the Plan in 2014. focal point for crosscutting issues – the concept
of a nucleus model for common mainstream-
ing of inequalities and rights-based approaches
Recommendations For The 2012-2013
should be considered; and v) the professional
Period
quality assurance function should be assigned
MTSIP strategic planning in appropriate office, more likely outside the
Management Office.
1. UN-Habitat should continue to strengthen the
strategic and results-based planning approach 6. The Organizational Review should be expanded
for its programmes to ensure continued sharp- to address the apparent imbalance of human
ened focus and coherence. resource allocation to regions and countries,
which ideally should result in: i) a leaner organi-
2. More dedicated efforts should be made to zation at Headquarters, which is more respon-
fully involve the regional and country offices in sive to regional and country level interventions;
the design, formulation and initiation of pro- ii) regional offices that are delegated increased
grammes. The UNDAF/ Delivering as One pro- autonomy to formulate regional programmes;
cess should be strengthened and supported in iii) a Habitat Programme Manager concept that
countries with a good potential for UN-Habitat should be expanded with more resources allo-
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
xv
cated to the country offices to enable Habitat progress for the entire year and become an
Programme Managers to engage more pro-ac- annual report. More detailed information on
tively in UNDAF/Delivering as One processes programmes and projects could be accessed
and in mobilizing financial resources; and iv) a from the countries’ webpage and UN-Habitat’s
country-level management and support system homepage.
to partner with urban forums that need to be
11. Information at country level should be gathered
strengthened.
on results achieved and experiences that signifi-
7. A new UN-Habitat internal communication cantly influence the evolution of the normative
strategy should be prepared, and continued framework to feed into UN-Habitat’s policy and
effort should be invested in breaking down strategic development and the flagship reports.
the communication and coordination barriers A simplified system of country evaluations with
among branches and units, ensuring that coor- limited resource requirements – complementing
dination among these are institutionalized. Focus Area or thematic evaluations – should be
institutionalized in order to have a more solid
Resource mobilization base for determining outcomes and impacts.
8. Rather than seeing earmarked funding as a 12. The progress reports should primarily reflect on
constraint, UN-Habitat should continue encour- global and regional achievements and present
aging the development partners’ willingness to feature stories based on country results that
fund specific programmes and projects. During highlight urban trends and responses to ur-
the conceptualization of pilot programmes/ ban development issues. An annex should be
projects, the design should have inbuilt options attached to the progress report, listing all the
for scaling up; the intent of which should be countries by region, and record the achieve-
agreed with the development partners in ad- ments by country and main indicator.
vance. Mobilization of non-earmarked funding
should still be given a high priority. Recommendations for the Strategic Plan
2014-2019
9. Several middle-income countries and cities
have financial resources of their own to support
Preparation of the Strategic Plan
programmes and require mainly technical skills
and expertise. UN-Habitat could invest in sourc- 13. An overarching paper on the sustainable cities
ing, mobilizing and providing an inventory to concept should be prepared, which would form
a reservoir of technical expertise, which could the basis for the preparation of the Focus Area
be offered to assist cities and middle-income policy and strategy papers, thus ensure a high
countries that require such skills. Provision of degree of coherence. Such papers should draw
such technical expertise is likely to facilitate on the outcomes of the Rio +20 conference in
a more inclusive participatory position in the June 2012, which could also be used for the
UNDAF process. This may call for equipping initial preparation of the Habitat III conference
regional offices with specialized technical staff in 2016.
that are able to respond to the needs of the
14. The process of developing the Strategic Plan
countries in their respective regions.
for 2014-2019 period should draw on the
lessons learned from the MTSIP. The prepara-
Monitoring and progress reporting tion should include: i) preparation of policy &
10. Country six-monthly progress reports should be strategy papers for the seven Focus Areas – the
prepared in summary format for those coun- preparation of Focus Area 6 Risk Reduction and
tries in which UN-Habitat is engaged and using Rehabilitation would benefit from a thematic
the Result Framework’s indicators of achieve- evaluation that could help formulate the Focus
ments in order to accumulate results at regional Area; ii) further development of the ENOF con-
and global levels. The second six-monthly cept with a particular attention to the interplay
progress report of the year should accumulate between the Focus Areas and how synergies
xvi Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
can best be achieved; and iii) conduct of base- Urban Forums and how to engage in the na-
line studies, which are relevant for the Focus tional policy dialogue with UNDAF, Delivering
Areas and development/refinement of indica- as One, and cooperation with donors and other
tors for the expected accomplishments. development partners.
Part 1:
Background
2 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
1. Introduction
improvements during the remaining period of the Part 2: Main Findings – contains the chapters that
MTSIP (2012-2013), and raised issues for consider- record the findings from the document review and
ation of the Strategic Plan 2014-2019. The evalua- interviews. These findings have been objectively
tion was prepared building on existing MTSIP prog- recorded and do not represent the opinion of the
ress reports and other MTSIP related assessments/ evaluators. Chapter 4 deals with UN-Habitat’s man-
evaluations that have been carried out, for example agement framework including the MTSIP Results
the organizational review, the project portfolio re- Framework and the ENOF. Chapter 5 deals with the
view, as well as thematic evaluations. The 2011/12 achievements during the first phase (2008-2009)
Self-Assessment Study Progress made in the imple- of MTSIP implementation including a summary of
mentation of the MTSIP 2008-2013 Focus Areas the 2009-2010 Peer Review. Chapter 6 provides a
was an essential contribution to the evaluation. detailed account of the accomplishments of each
of the six Focus Areas during the second phase
The evaluation was conducted by external evalu-
(2010-2011) of the MTSIP. Chapter 7 deals with the
ators, Mr Don Okpala, Idopin, Nigeria and Mr Per
crosscutting issues: disaster management, gender
Kirkemann, Nordic Consulting Group, Denmark.
mainstreaming, and urban youth. Chapter 8 is con-
UN-Habitat’s Monitoring and Evaluation Unit (now
cerned with the organizational restructuring that
the Evaluation Unit) was responsible for planning
was implemented from January 2012 and which will
and managing the evaluation. UN-Habitat Head-
impact on UN-Habitat’s delivery of services during
quarters and regional and country offices partic-
the current phase (2012-2013) of the MTSIP. Finally,
ipated in the evaluation through interviews and a
Chapter 9 provides an account of the ongoing for-
country level questionnaire survey. The evaluation
mulation of the Strategic Plan 2014-2019 and the
commenced on 21 November 2011 – ending in June
work programme for 2014-2015.
2012. The programme for the evaluation is attached
as Annex II and the List of Persons Interviewed and Part 3: Conclusions, Lessons Learned, and Rec-
Questionnaire Respondents as Annex III. ommendations – contains the evaluators’ con-
clusions, lessons learned, and recommendations in
The Evaluation Report is divided into Chapters 10, 11, and 12 respectively.
three parts:
Part 1: Background – contains: Chapter 1 Intro-
duction; Chapter 2 which elaborates on the evo-
lution and background for the formulation of the
MTSIP and presents the strategic and institutional
objectives, and Chapter 3 which outlines the
Evaluation approach and methodology, including
the evaluation questions.
4 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
The first United Nations Conference on Human Set- point within the United Nations System for human
tlements was held in Vancouver, Canada, in 1976 settlements; and establishment of the World Urban
resulting in the establishment of the United Nations Forum to foster dialogue and debate on human set-
Centre for Human Settlements (UNCHS) by General tlements.
Assembly Resolution 32/162 of December 1977.
The Johannesburg Plan of Implementation of the
Faced with rapid urbanization, acceleration of slum
World Summit on Sustainable Development in 2002
formation and growing evidence of urban poverty,
further emphasized the importance of shelter as a
the second United Nations Conference on Human
key focus, alongside water and sanitation, health,
Settlements (Habitat II) was held in Istanbul, Tur-
agriculture and biodiversity. The 2005 World Sum-
key in 1996. The main outcome of the conference
mit Outcome carried the issue further and prior-
was the adoption of the Habitat Agenda, i.e. the
itized slum prevention alongside slum upgrading
mandate of UN-Habitat. The Habitat Agenda com-
and encouraged support for the Habitat and Human
prises two main goals: adequate shelter for all and
Settlements Foundation and its Slum Upgrading
sustainable human settlements development in an
Facility. 4 Additional mandates come from relevant
urbanizing world. The Cities without Slums Initiative
legislative bodies regarding Agenda 21 (Chapters
of UN-Habitat and the World Bank endorsed the
7, 21, and 28) and resolutions of the UN-Habitat
mandate in 19992. The UN-Habitat mandate was,
Governing Council and the United Nations General
furthermore, reaffirmed by the Millennium Declara-
Assembly.
tion (adopted at the 2000 Millennium Summit) that
included the eight Millennium Development Goals An in-depth evaluation in 2005 of UN-Habitat by the
(MDGs), of which the MDG7 ‘Ensure Environmental Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) called
Sustainability’ is of particular relevance3. for a reform of UN-Habitat, with the specific goal
of sharpening its programmatic focus and broad-
The Istanbul+5, a special session of the General
ening its funding base in order to have a greater
Assembly on the implementation of the Habitat
impact. This led to the formulation of the six-year
Agenda, held in 2001, recommended strengthen-
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan
ing the UNCHS. This led to three main decisions:
(MTSIP) 2008-2013.
i) elevation of the UNCHS to a fully-fledged ‘Pro-
gramme’ status – the United Nations Human Settle- The Governing Council of UN-Habitat endorsed and
ments Programme (UN-Habitat); ii) transformation approved (resolution 21/2) the MTSIP 2008-2013 at
of the Commission on Human Settlements into a its 21st session in April 2007. The overarching goal
Governing Council, and iii) establishment of the of the Plan is “to ensure an effective contribution
Committee of Permanent Representatives (CPR), to sustainable urbanization” and its vision is to help
as a formal inter-sessional subsidiary body of the “create by 2013 the necessary conditions for con-
Governing Council through resolution 56/206 of 21 certed international and national efforts to stabilize
December 2001. Other important decisions in the the growth of slums and to set the stage for sub-
resolution include strengthening the normative role sequent reduction in and reversal of the number of
of UN-Habitat; designating UN-Habitat as the focal slum dwellers”.
2 The Cities Without Slums Initiative was launched through the
Cities Alliance in 1999 with support from UN-Habitat and the 4 At the turn of the 21st century it was recognized that the rate
World Bank. Cities Alliance is a global partnership with cities to of urban growth was almost equal to the rate of slum formation
promote prosperous cities without slums. in many developing countries. Slums represented the most
3 Target 7.C: Halve by 2015, the proportion of people visible manifestation of urban poverty,the failure of sectoral
without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic policies, and the failure of institutions in providing for the basic
sanitation; and Target 7.D: Have achieved by 2020 a significant needs. Today one billion people live in slums and deprived
improvement in the lives of at least 100 million slum dwellers. neighbourhoods.
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
5
Delegates following the proceedings at the 21st session of the Governing Council held in 2007 that approved the
MTSIP 2008-2013. © UN-Habitat
The MTSIP 2008-2013 was therefore developed Focus Area 1 concerns the global normative and ad-
with the intention of: sharpening UN-Habitat’s focus vocacy role of UN-Habitat; Focus Areas 2 to 5 reflect
in accordance with the United Nations system-wide the substantive areas; and Focus Area 6 concerns
reform initiatives; and enhancing coherence and UN-Habitat’s internal management, which cuts across
results-based management. To realize its corporate Focus Areas 1 to 5. Focus Area Policy and Strategy Pa-
vision and achieve its strategic and institutional ob- pers have been developed for Focus Areas 1 to 5 pro-
jectives (see Box 2.1), the MTSIP has been conceived viding a detailed explanation on substance, strategy,
with six mutual reinforcing Focus Areas: actions, approach, and expected accomplishments.
Following the endorsement of the MTSIP, an Action 4. Realignment, by 2011, of human resources,
Plan was prepared with four objectives (the MTSIP managerial and administrative systems to
Action Plan): enable the implementation of the MTSIP to
be scaled up effectively and to contribute to
1. Preparation and implementation of an en-
excellence in management.
hanced normative and operational framework
to enable UN-Habitat to play a leadership role The Action Plan’s timeframe was determined by
in promoting sustainable urbanization in at two considerations: i) the necessity for all major
least 30 countries by 2013; policies, concepts and strategies to be put in place
2. Implementation, by 2011, of a results-based by the end of the first quarter of 2008 to enable
management and knowledge management UN-Habitat engage in extensive consultations with
system that ensures transparency and account- governments and partners during the second quar-
ability; ter of 2008 and launch the Plan at the Fourth Ses-
sion of the World Urban Forum in China in October
3. Development and implementation of a
2008; and ii) a three-phased approach including a
resource mobilization and communication
one-year kick start phase in 2008, a two-year roll-
strategy;
out phase in 2009-2010, and a three-year scaling
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
7
up phase for 2011-2013. The Action Plan also pre- This necessitated the preparation of two separate
sented a set of “quick-wins” and a corresponding periodic progress reports on UN-Habitat’s perfor-
set of indicators. mance, i.e. on MTSIP and work programme per-
formance. However, the work programme for
The MTSIP was to be implemented in three two-year
2012-2013 is fully aligned with the MTSIP Results
phases corresponding to the regular biennial work
Framework and thus brings to an end the issue of
programmes. Although it was anticipated that the
double reporting. The MTSIP biennial work pro-
MTSIP phases and the biennial work programmes
gramme phases and the Action Plan phases are
should be fully aligned, the MTSIP Results Frame-
shown in Table 2.1.
work and expected accomplishments were formu-
lated later and differently than those of the regular
biennial work programmes for the biennia 2008-
2009 and 2010-2011.
Relevance 1. To what extent do national and local stakeholders consider the MTSIP relevant for promoting sustainable
urbanization?
2. After four years of implementation, does UN-Habitat management still perceive the MTSIP as relevant, or
what changes could ideally be made for the current MTSIP and what should the strategic framework be
for the next Strategic Plan?
Effectiveness 3. To what extent is the MTSIP likely to achieve its immediate and development objectives and what would
be the probable time horizon?
4. What are the major factors influencing the achievements or non-achievements of the objectives, and what
role has the planning process played?
Efficiency 5. Are results generated in accordance with the MTSIP Results Framework, appropriately captured in the
progress reporting/ monitoring process, and generated in a cost-efficient manner?
Impact 6. To what extent has the implementation of MTSIP had intended and non-intended impact so far on
national policies, strategies, capacity development, and resource allocation in Priority Countries of the
Enhanced Normative and Operational Framework to promote sustainable urbanization?
7. What is the likelihood that MTSIP will have an impact on slum dwellers’ situation worldwide?
Sustainability 8. What is the likelihood that national governments and local authorities will continuously pursue the MTSIP
policies and strategies?
Coherence 9. What is the degree of coherence: a) among the six Focus Areas; and b) between global, regional, and
country level efforts?
10. What is the degree of coherence between the MTSIP and the biennial work programmes, and is the
performance monitoring effectively coordinated?
with the implementation of the current MTSIP, • Consultations were undertaken with
achieved results, and considerations on the next UN-Habitat’s senior management in conjunc-
Strategic Plan. The Guide for the semi-struc- tion with the presentation of the Evaluation’s
tured interviews at Headquarters and regional initial findings, conclusions, lessons learned,
offices is attached as Annex V; and recommendations before the finalization of
the evaluation report to ensure the relevance of
• Semi-structured group interviews with the Focus
these for the further implementation of the cur-
Area teams at Headquarters were conducted in
rent MTSIP and planning for the next Strategic
order to have specific information on the Focus
Plan.
Areas’ performance and to assess the degree
of consensus on policy and strategic issues. The
guide for the semi-structured group interviews
3.4 Limitations
with Focus Area teams is attached as Annex VI; The evaluation would have benefitted from wider
consultations with Habitat partners, government
• A questionnaire survey was conducted in order
officials, donors, and civil society. The MTSIP prog-
to reach a wider audience. The focus of the
ress reports provide limited information on the
survey on the country level was to collect the
outcomes and impact of UN-Habitat interventions,
viewpoints of national governments, local
which to some degree is redressed by thematic and
authorities, and civil society. The Evaluation Unit
programme evaluations. The evaluation would also
of UN-Habitat was requested to assist with the
have benefitted from more in-depth country level
surveys. A summary of the country level ques-
assessments in order to obtain a more complete
tionnaire survey is attached as Annex VII;
impression of outcomes and intended impacts, but
• Field visits were conducted in two selected this would have required a larger team and more
countries, Colombia and Sri Lanka in order to time – and thus more resources.
get a better understanding of country level
achievements and cooperation patterns. Inter-
views were conducted with UN-Habitat coun-
try teams, government officials, and Habitat
partners.
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
11
Part 2:
Main Findings
Shutterstock
12 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
This chapter elaborates on some of the fundamen- 2. Monitoring the Habitat Agenda
tal elements of the MTSIP that constitute its opera- (Focus Area 1);
tional framework. Most of these elements evolved
3. Regional and technical cooperation
during the initial years of MTSIP and were therefore
(all Focus Areas); and
not in place when the MTSIP was launched. This
gave rise to a complicated start and constrained the 4. Human settlements financing
implementation of MTSIP in the initial phase, while (Focus Areas 4 and 5)
also providing time for establishing a more focused
The delegation of responsibilities to UN-Habitat’s
approach to UN-Habitat’s operations.
Divisions for the Sub-programmes and the Focus
Areas is shown in Tables 4.1 and 4.2 respectively.
4.1 Biennial Strategic Frame-
works, Work Programmes and 2008-2009 biennial period
Budgets
The proposed strategic framework for the period
The biennial work programmes are based on a bi-
2008-2009 was submitted for approval at the
ennial strategic framework, which is structured
General Assembly’s sixty-first session in 2006. The
on four sub-programmes that were endorsed by
proposed work programme was presented to the
the Governing Council of the Human Settlements
Governing Council for approval at its 21st session in
Programme and approved by the General Assem-
April 2007 at which session the MTSIP 2008-2013
bly. The MTSIP is being implemented in three bien-
was also approved. When approving the MTSIP the
nial work programmes (2008-2009, 2010-2011,
Governing Council acknowledged the need for
and 2012-2013). The 2008-2009 and 2010-2011
improvement of the Plan to include results, indica-
work programmes and MTSIP Results Framework
tors of achievements and targets in order to refine
were not fully aligned, as they were subject to their
each of the Focus Areas. The process of refining the
respective planning and approval processes. The
MTSIP started in September 2008 and was com-
relationship between the sub-programmes and Fo-
pleted with the refined Results Framework in March
cus Areas is presented below:
2009. Although the substance of the work pro-
1. Shelter and sustainable human settlements gramme and MTSIP to a large extent was similar, the
development (Focus Areas 2 and 3); two documents ended up having different expected
achievements and indicators, resulting in double
reporting.
Source: United Nations Board of Auditors, New York, Management Letter – May 2011:
Interim audit of the UN Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat).
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
13
4. Environmentally sound basic urban infrastructure and services Human Settlements Financing Division
Table 4.3: Resource envelope for the three biennial work programmes (USD ‘000’)
Actual Approved appropriation Estimates
Category
2008-2009 2010-2011 2012-2013
Core resources
Source: Proposed work programme and budget for the biennium 2012-2013, page 12, 10 January 2011. The amended
Proposed programme budget for the biennium 2012-2013 dated 5 April 2011 has slightly revised figures
The budget estimate increased by 11.8 per cent The expenditure distribution by Focus Areas for the
from the first to the second biennial and by 10.2 biennial work programmes 2010-2011 and 2012-
per cent from the second to the third biennial. An 2013 respectively is shown in Table 4.5. There are
overhead is drawn from the special purpose and some significant changes from the 2010-2011 work
technical cooperation funds, which has been in the programme compared to the 2012-2013 work pro-
range of 5.4 to 7.7 per cent to fund Headquarters’ gramme – with Focus Area 1, Focus Area 2 and
operations. The earmarked funding – excluding Focus Area 6 obtaining substantial increases; Focus
overheads – constitute 67.5 per cent and 75.5 per Area 3 and Focus Area 4 obtaining moderate in-
cent of the total budget. Table 4.4 shows that the creases; and Focus Area 5 a reduction.
distribution by budget category has changed little
over the three biennia.
Programme Support 4% 5% 4%
Whereas 80.5 per cent of budget is related to the plementation of the work programme and budget.
Focus Areas in the 2010-2011 work programme For MTSIP, UN-Habitat monitors and reports on the
budget, the entire budget for 2012-2013 is fully implementation of the MTSIP sheets, which set out
aligned with the MTSIP Focus Areas. criteria and guidance on how progress, against each
indicator of achievement, is measured.
The donor base for non-earmarked contributions
is very narrow with 90 per cent of core voluntary
contributions coming from just ten donors. The
4.2 MTSIP Results Framework
non-earmarked donor contributions are short-term The MTSIP Results Framework consists of strategic
in nature. Four donors (Norway, Spain, Sweden results, expected accomplishments, sub-expected
and United Kingdom) have signed multi-year pro- accomplishments, and indicators of achievements.
gramme framework agreements. Overdependence The Results Framework is the basis for organiza-
on a few donors and the small number of multi- tional planning, programming and budgeting, mon-
year agreements render funding unpredictable and itoring and evaluation, and reporting. The MTSIP
vulnerable to changes in donor priorities. In early goal is “Sustainable urbanization created by cities
2011 the United Kingdom withdrew its support to and regions that provide all citizens with adequate
UN-Habitat following a critical 2011 Multilateral shelter, services, security, and employment opportu-
Aid Review by DFID9. The United Kingdom fund- nities regardless of age, sex, and social strata”. The
ing constituted, at the time, about 7 per cent of MTSIP strategic result is “Sustainable urbanization
UN-Habitat’s core funding. principles drive policy and practice” – and contain-
ing the following indicators: a) proportion of urban
Accountability and reporting of the MTSIP population living in slums in developing regions; b)
percentage of access to piped water and sanitation
The progress of MTSIP in relation to the Results
services in developing regions; and c) percentage of
Framework and the biennial work programmes are
access to durable housing and sufficient living area
monitored on a regular basis: the first year with
in developing regions. The six Focus Areas and their
quarterly progress reports and since 2009 on a half-
strategic results are shown in Table 4.6. The MTSIP
year basis. Instead of the second six-month prog-
Results Framework is attached as Annex VIII.
ress report for 2011, it was decided that it would
be turned into an annual report and thus accumu- MTSIP Focus Area task forces were established with
late progress for the entire year. For 2008-2009 cross-divisional membership, which were chaired by
and 2010-2011 UN-Habitat prepared two separate division directors that reported to the MTSIP Steer-
reports for the CPR due to the non-alignment of ing Committee. The Focus Areas task forces were
the MTSIP with the work programme. For the work transformed into Focus Area teams in January 2010
programme, UN-Habitat uses the Integrated Mon- with the intent to break what was referred to as a
itoring and Document Information System (IMDIS) ‘silo mentality’ and encourage cross-divisional col-
to monitor progress and generate reports on im- laboration.
9 UN-Habitat agreed with some of the conclusions, but was
seriously concerned the research methodology and some critical
omissions made in the review.
16 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
1. Effective advocacy, monitoring, and partnership; Improved sustainable urbanization policies from local to global level adopted
2. Participatory planning, management, and Inclusive urban planning, management and governance improved at national
governance; and local levels
3. Access to land and housing for all; Improved access to land and housing
4. Environmentally sound basic urban infrastructure Expanded access to environmentally sound basic urban infrastructure services
and services; with a special focus on the unserved and under-served
5. Strengthening human settlements finance systems Increased sustainable financing for affordable and social housing and
infrastructure
4.3 The Enhanced Normative and activities at the global, regional, and national
Operational Framework levels. Towards this goal, the ENOF Task Force
provides a platform for internal policy dialogue
The ENOF was developed to enhance the effective-
and coordination among all MTSIP Focus Areas
ness of UN-Habitat’s support to Member States in
and the related agency branches.
the implementation of the MTSIP 2008-2013. It
provides a bridge between UN-Habitat’s normative UN-Habitat Country Programme Documents were
and operational work – seeking to better connect developed, as a means through which the norma-
UN-Habitat’s global policy with regional and coun- tive and operational divide would be integrated
try activities. The ENOF strategy focuses on: internal at country level. In 2008, 33 Habitat Country Pro-
harmonization and better coordination between gramme Documents were prepared. They are useful
normative and operational work; policy integration for strategizing, planning, coordinating and moni-
and programmatic coherence at the country level; toring of programme activities at the country level.
and monitoring, evaluation, and reporting. The The country documents linked with other formal
framework has two tracks: strategies and frameworks, such as the UNDAFs.
UN-Habitat is currently backstopping some countries
• The first track has four components: i)
to update their initial country documents, including
integrated normative and operational work
Burkina Faso, Colombia, Costa Rica, Democratic
at country level through Habitat Country
Republic of the Congo, Ecuador, Kenya, Malawi,
Programme Documents; ii) advocacy platforms
Mexico, the Philippines, Senegal, Vanuatu and
such as the World Urban Campaign10 and
Vietnam. Cuba will launch its first Habitat Country
National Urban Forums; iii) the focus areas’
Programme Document in the near future.
policy and strategy papers that link global,
regional and country support; and iv) strategic A first assessment11 was undertaken in 2010 to
partnerships. The goal is policy integration and evaluate the experiences and lessons learned from
programmatic coherence at the country level. the first batch of Habitat Country Programme Doc-
• The second track focuses on internal uments. The overall quality of most country doc-
collaboration aiming to align UN-Habitat’s uments was considered adequate, but a number
resources to more effectively achieve impact of shortcomings were identified. A number of key
at the appropriate scale in selected countries. MTSIP policy documents, including the Focus Area
It consists of an integrated programme of policy and strategy paper, were only made available
after the first batch of country documents were
10 The World Urban Campaign is a global coalition of public,
private and civil society partners united by the common desire
published and disseminated, resulting in different
to advocate on the positive role of cities around the world, and interpretations of the Focus Area.
to promote sustainable urbanization policies, strategies and
practices. The Campaign was launched in Rio de Janeiro at the
Fifth Session of the World Urban Forum in March 2010. The
Campaign is coordinated by UN-Habitat and governed by a 11 UN-Habitat, The First Assessment of the Habitat Country
Steering Committee of partners. Programme Documents, 2010
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
17
The majority of countries operate in accordance The diversified internal reporting requirements are
with the UNDAF procedures and/or the Delivering seen as a constraining factor. The coordination
as One initiative and take their point of departure with the regional offices is generally effective and
in identified country needs. The UN-Habitat work good, whereas the coordination with Headquarters
at country level within the UNDAF, as well as out- is less effective with delayed response time. There
side the framework, is to a large extent related to is a need for improved coordination procedures in
the MTSIP Focus Areas. A few countries work with order to create better synergies. The cooperation
all five substantive Focus Areas and some with only with United Nations agencies at the country level is
one – the majority of countries work with two to generally found to be good and has resulted in an
four. The results are most commonly generated in increased activity level and additional funding. The
accordance with the MTSIP Results Framework. The cooperation with other United Nations agencies has
perception of the ENOF at country level varies from increased UN-Habitat’s visibility and voice.
being seen as a positive contribution to being ab-
The countries have stated the following priorities for
stract and that it could be made more relevant.
the Strategic Plan 2014-2019: urban management
All countries’ perceive UN-Habitat’s support as and governance (with special attention to the urban
having a positive impact on national urban policies poor), land management and access to land, cli-
and planning. UN-Habitat has generally supported mate change adaptation, disaster preparedness/risk
policies related to urban planning, land manage- reduction, urban environment, housing & slum up-
ment, housing, water and sanitation, solid waste grading and prevention, water & sanitation, trans-
management and climate change. Most countries port and mobility, energy, and local economic de-
perceive UN-Habitat’s support for slum prevention velopment. Central and local governments’ capacity
and upgrading as contributing positively to improv- development is also seen as a priority. The priorities
ing the slum dwellers’ situation in the longer-term vary from region to region and country to country
through pro-poor housing policies, housing financ- according to the prevailing contexts.
ing, and security of tenure – short-term improve-
ments at scale will require substantial capital injec- 4.4 Delivering as One United
tions. Some of UN-Habitat’s support is translated Nations initiative
into national development plans and legislation. The
The Delivering as One initiative was taken at the
policy and strategy principles – as contained in the
World Urban Summit in 2005. A panel was estab-
Habitat Agenda and MTSIP – are likely to continue
lished to explore how the United Nations system
influencing national and local governments’ urban
could work more coherently and effectively across
and housing policies. The UN-Habitat support – in
the world, in the areas of development, humanitar-
cooperation with its partners – raises awareness and
ian assistance, and the environment. The panel’s re-
has a catalytic effect, which also encompasses gov-
port was issued in November 2006, which included
ernance, participatory planning and budgeting.
recommendations on institutional reforms based
All countries see access to funding as the major on four pillars: One Leader, One Programme, One
constraint. The recipient countries’ commitment, Budgetary Framework, and where appropriate One
capacity and access to funding, limit the effect of Office. A fifth pillar ‘One Communication Strategy’
UN-Habitat interventions. A large part of the fund- was added later. Eight Delivering as One pilot coun-
ing is mobilized locally. More support from Head- tries were chosen, in six of which UN-Habitat was
quarters for mobilizing funding is warranted, among active. A review was undertaken of UN-Habitat’s
others through consolidated partnerships with de- participation in the Delivering as One initiative in
velopment agencies. The Habitat Programme Man- 201112.
agers are supported with limited funding, which
reduces the scope for pro-active initiatives.
The countries in which UN-Habitat was active in • The current fragmented practices in UN-Habitat
the Delivering as One initiative were Cape Verde, should be reviewed to enable it to ‘deliver as
Mozambique, Pakistan, Rwanda, Tanzania, and one’ at country level. Without a common and
Vietnam. The review focused on the challenges and unified administrative, budgetary, accounting
opportunities of UN-Habitat’s participation in the and reporting system at country level, Habitat
Delivering as One initiative and made recommenda- country programmes will remain fragmented
tions for a more rational, coherent and effective par- and be less recognized in the Delivering as
ticipation. The review found that it would be impor- One process. UN-Habitat should continue to
tant for UN-Habitat, being a relatively small United strengthen its normative and operational work
Nations agency in the United Nations system with a at country level through active participation in
specific mandate, to overcome a number of struc- the United Nations Country Teams in the
tural constraints at Headquarters, regional office, Delivering as One context;
and country levels, in order to lay the foundation for
• UN-Habitat’s ability to position the urban
full participation in the United Nations system-wide
agenda is becoming extremely important.
initiative.
Establishment of ‘National Urbanization Com-
Habitat Programme Managers took the lead in mittees’ or ‘National Urban Forums’ with mem-
the time-demanding and complex tasks of Deliv- bership drawn from government, civil society,
ering as One planning and implementation. They and the private sector are seen as an essential
made commendable efforts in demonstrating means for advocating the urban agenda;
the competency and comparative advantage of • Within the ‘One United Nations’ country
UN-Habitat. It was mainly the Regional Technical planning documents (UNDAF, United Nations
Cooperation Division involved without significant Development Assistance Plan, etc.) UN-Habitat
inputs from other divisions. The Headquarters did should ensure that its component is coherent,
not adapt its working system and structure as One structured and coordinated to demonstrate
UN-Habitat. Nonetheless, Delivering as One changed UN-Habitat’s comparative advantages to the
the way in which country offices were representing Delivering as One process;
the agency by becoming fully participative in the
• Regional offices should be gradually restruc-
new One United Nations approach. Some of the re-
tured and expanded to become fully-fledged
view’s findings are:
regional arms of UN-Habitat – with balanced
• The Habitat Programme Managers in Deliver- normative, operational and managerial tasks.
ing as One countries performed well. Habitat
• The Delivering as One reform process has cre-
Programme Managers need some further del-
ated a demand on UN-Habitat’s way of ‘doing
egation of authority and seed funds, to better
business’ within the United Nations system.
contribute to the Delivering as One process at
There is a need at Headquarters’ level to coor-
country level. Field staff, although qualified,
dinate and monitor Delivering as One develop-
were not able to respond to all of the new
ment and provide assistance to Delivering as
demanding requests from governments without
One countries. Headquarters should systematize
support from Headquarters;
the Delivering as One experience through the
• UN-Habitat interventions undertaken and Human Settlement Officers in regional offices
financed in Delivering as One countries were and share this with Delivering as One countries
important and delivered results that were and ‘self-started’ Delivering as One countries.
recognized by governments. However, it is UN-Habitat Headquarters should streamline its
possible that more emphasis on policy and structure and working modality to become One
strategy interventions could have contributed UN-Habitat.
to greater impacts. UN-Habitat should prepare
country strategies to respond to country specific
challenges;
22 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
4.5 UN-Habitat Partnerships There has been a lack of continuity, which in turn
impacts on UN-Habitat’s ability to foster and main-
Through national and global information services,
tain horizontal cooperation and build a sturdy and
UN-Habitat facilitates that concerns and priorities of
enduring platform for advocacy, policy formulation,
the human settlement sector are mainstreamed into
programme implementation, and resource mobiliza-
national policies and programmes.
tion. The challenge is to keep the major players on
UN-Habitat uses global, regional, and national plat- board over time and at the same time.
forms to engage partners13:
UN-Habitat has in recent times started to revive
• Global level: UN-Habitat worked with a some partner networks, among them researchers,
wide range of fellow United Nations agencies, universities and professionals, which will provide all
governments, and a wide range of partners, the more reason for a new partnership strategy, with
including World Habitat Day 2010, the World the timing seeming right for a new concerted begin-
Urban Campaign, World Urban Forum, and the ning, given the MTSIP, the World Urban Campaign,
Shanghai World Expo 2010. Through global and the growing prominence of the World Urban
forums, UN-Habitat has focussed on engaging Forum. Greater internal coordination and informa-
local authorities to tend to the MDGs. tion exchange within UN-Habitat will be required to
arrive at a common policy and adhere to it. Virtually
• Regional level: Partnerships at the regional
every division, branch, regional office had their own
level have focused on: 1) support to regional
exclusive network of partners developed over the
conferences on housing and urban develop-
course of their activities. Not all of these partners
ment in Africa, Latin America and the Carib-
are known to the entire agency. The absence of in-
bean, and Asia and the Pacific, which provide
ternal information has led to a state where no single
an effective partnership instrument for
office has a total overview of UN-Habitat’s coopera-
UN-Habitat in influencing policy, support-
tion with partners.
ing of implementation, and joint monitoring
and evaluation; 2) cooperation with regional Strategic partnerships are key to the promotion
development banks with a view to increasing of sustainable urbanization and the provision of
investment flows to the UN-Habitat Water and adequate shelter for all. UN-Habitat must utilize a
Sanitation Trust Fund; catalytic approach in its normative and operational
• National level: Partnerships include Na- work, and align its partnerships with the MTSIP Fo-
tional Habitat Committees and National Ur- cus Areas and engage partners in the ENOF – using
ban Forums. Partnerships at the national and this as platform to go to scale nationally, regionally
sub-national levels focused on five main Habitat and globally. The following actions are envisaged in
Agenda issues: a) environment, climate change; the New Partnership Strategy:
b) emergency response and humanitarian assis- • UN-Habitat should launch a coordinated in-
tance, post disaster and post conflict recovery stitution-wide effort to catalogue the Habitat
and longer term reconstruction; c) land, hous- partners, categorize them by Focus Area, part-
ing and basic services; d) urban poverty reduc- ner type, and type of partnership using partner
tion; and e) gender, women and young people. selection and evaluation criteria;
A New Partnership Strategy was presented in May • A ‘partners platform’ should be established as
201114, which includes information on the back- an assembly of partners to dialogue among
ground and current status. The current collabora- themselves, and with UN-Habitat, and which
tion of UN-Habitat with old and new partners is in will set common priorities. Meetings of the
many ways the result of shifting funding patterns partners’ platform could take place at the
and funding partnerships with donors as well as sessions of the World Urban Forum and the
their changing priorities. Governing Council. The partners platform
13 United Nations Economic and Social Council, 2011, Coordinated should primarily focus on global awareness
Implementation of the Habitat Agenda: Report of the Secretary-
General. raising, policy discourse, information exchange,
14 UN-Habitat, 2011, UN-Habitat Partnership Strategy.
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
23
and exchange of best practices in sustainable The total number of projects/programmes was 344
urbanization; in December 2010 having a total value of USD 769
million. ‘Project’ was chosen as the unit of analysis
• Habitat partners should be encouraged to ac-
as it is a time-bound intervention with defined bud-
tively participate in the formulation of sustain-
get and sources of funding. However, the review
able urbanization policy at the global, national,
encountered some problems with this definition, as
and local levels. UN-Habitat should facilitate the
programmes and fund facilities may contain several
operationalizing of ENOF at the national and
projects. The information in the database may not
local levels, especially when preparing country
be fully accurate as: new projects have been added
documents in cooperation with national gov-
or old ones terminated without this being reflected;
ernments – including the promotion of pro-
and several interventions may be part of the same
grammes and projects and their funding;
managerial framework, for example one being a
• Within Delivering as One and ‘One United Na- pilot phase leading to an implementation phase.
tions’, UN-Habitat should systematically revive There could therefore be two projects for financial
interagency-level cooperation to support the and administrative reasons, but conceptually they
achievement of sustainable urbanization. Such are one and the same activity.
strengthened inter-agency cooperation should
go hand-in-hand with improving collaboration The projects’ average budget size is about USD 2.24
with the World Bank, regional financial insti- million and average duration is less than three years.
tutions, and bilateral development agencies. 75 per cent of the projects have budgets below USD
Building on UN-Habitat’s inter-agency coopera- 1 million and the five largest projects account for
tion, these linkages should be used as a means 30 per cent. In term of numbers, 76 per cent of the
of facilitating a greater UN-Habitat presence in projects are implemented in one country only, 18
the country through the UNDAF process. per cent are global, and 10 per cent are regional or
sub-regional16. In terms of value, the corresponding
A reconsideration of the current situation with re-
percentages are 70, 22 and 8 per cent respectively.
spect to partners and partnerships would not only
About 50 per cent of the projects relate to Focus
be beneficial to UN-Habitat in fulfilling its role and
Area 2 in terms of numbers, while only 2 per cent
goals, but would also enhance its political position
relate to Focus Area 5 and the other four Focus Ar-
in the United Nations system and other decision-
eas have about 10 per cent each. In terms of value,
making fora. The UN-Habitat Partnership Strategy
the picture changes somewhat with 57 per cent re-
paper contains guidelines for: partner selection and
lating to Focus Area 2, 16 per cent to Focus Area
evaluation criteria; types of partnerships; and cate-
4, and the other four Focus Areas are less than 10
gories of partners.
per cent.
4.6 UN-Habitat Programme/Project New programmes and projects on cities and climate
Portfolio change, municipal finance, urban planning, urban
mobility and energy have been launched. Among
A review of UN-Habitat’s programme and project
these are: i) Promoting low emission urban devel-
portfolio was conducted from November 2010 to
opment strategies in emerging economy countries
April 2011 with the purpose of providing an over-
(European Union at EUR 6.7 million); ii) Promoting
all overview15. The objectives were: 1) to review
sustainable transport solutions for East African cities
UN-Habitat’s databases of programmes and projects
(UNEP/GEF at USD 2.85 million); and iii) Develop-
and make a map of the complete current portfolio
ment of urban corridors in Africa (European Union
according to selected variables; and 2) to make an
– awaits funding). Spain is funding new programme
initial, general analysis of the current portfolio’s rel-
areas with USD 9.0 million under the theme Achiev-
evance to the strategic results of the MTSIP.
ing Sustainable Urban Development Priorities.
15 UN-Habitat, 2011, Final Report: A review of the portfolio of 16 The percentages add up to 104 per cent. We contacted Kim
projects and programmes in UN-Habitat as of December 2010, Forss, who confirmed that this was an error, but he was not in a
prepared by Kim Forss. position to provide the correct figures.
24 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
5.1 MTSIP Achievements During Other key relevant achievements during 2008 were:
2008
• Refinement of MTSIP Focus Areas by articulat-
Following the MTSIP approval, an Action Plan was ing and reformulating ‘specific, measurable,
developed with 12 ‘quick-wins’ priority action areas achievable, realistic, and time-bound SMART
that were initiated in the course of 2008. The fourth (Specific, measurable, accurate, reliable and
quarterly progress report (December 2008) pre- timely) results and indicators that demonstrate
sented overall progress, challenges and next steps. consistency with results-based management
Some months were lost in the beginning of 2008 principles;
due to the political situation in Kenya17. The status
• The Fourth Session of the World Urban Forum
of the ‘quick-wins’ by end of 2008 is presented in
was held in November 2008 in China and
Table 5.1.
attended by about 8,000 participants from 174
countries;
Source: UN-Habitat, 2008, One year of Implementation of the MTSIP, 4th Quarterly Progress Report.
• The Gender Equality Action Plan was developed In the course of implementation of the MTSIP, some
to strengthen gender mainstreaming in im- issues came to the fore, which included: a) concep-
plementation of the MTSIP as gender was not tual and methodological difficulties in reconciling
adequately captured – and was discussed at the the ambitious expected results; b) complex efforts
Fourth session of the World Urban Forum with required for compliance with different reporting
the intent of having it finalized; mechanisms and accountability frameworks; and c)
inadequacy of organizational and governance struc-
• UN-Habitat intensified its MTSIP alignment to
tures of UN-Habitat.
contribute to United Nations reforms at country
level and was actively engaged in six out of the
eight pilot countries of the Delivering as One 5.2 MTSIP Achievements During
initiative; 2009
• UN-Habitat became a member of the In- Six-monthly progress reports were introduced in
ter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC), putting 2009 that were structured around the MTSIP Focus
the agency on a new and equal footing in Areas. CPR endorsed the first report in June 2009
global humanitarian policy and operations. and the second in December 2009. Highlights of
achievements during 2009 are presented below:
The cooperation for the period 2008-2009 between
UN-Habitat and the Government of Norway was Effective advocacy, monitoring, and partnership
subject to an assessment of the results achieved (Focus Area 1): UN-Habitat strengthened its role as
after one year of implementation related to Focus facilitator for the application of policy-oriented ur-
Area 6, Excellence in management18. It concluded, ban indicators at the global, regional, national and
among other, that: the MTSIP provided an overall local levels. UN-Habitat Global Urban Observatory
new corporate vision and introduced a new drive cooperated with 133 urban observatories from all
and motivation among staff; the MTSIP Results regions in 2009, up from 126 at the end of 2008.
Framework had contributed to a better alignment Media and web outreach and flagship reports im-
and integration between UN-Habitat’s divisions, and proved awareness of sustainable urbanization is-
focussing on results had led to an increased under- sues. World Habitat Day was celebrated in 45 coun-
standing of the need for collaboration; and that the tries, up from 36 countries in 2008. Mobilization of
Habitat Country Programme Documents for the partners increased and the Agency reached a total
first time presented a basis for joint programming of 233 cooperation agreements with partners. The
and funding. Some activities had less progress: the new World Urban Campaign started consolidating
Resource Mobilization Unit was only partly estab- the partner base.
lished; the proposals for delegation of authority and
Urban planning, management, and governance (Fo-
accountability framework encountered slow prog-
cus Area 2): Twenty-eight countries had improved
ress; and no organizational master plan was pre-
their policies, legislation and strategies for urban
pared. The MTSIP made a good start at providing
planning, management, and governance with sup-
an overarching organizational vision, but the institu-
port from UN-Habitat at the end of 2009. Human
tional, governance and management arrangements
settlement issues were integrated into 23 UNDAF,
at the time were not likely to sustain further prog-
20 national development plans, and ten poverty re-
ress. It was recommended that the peer review pro-
duction strategy papers; and a total of 29 institu-
cess for 2009 should be speeded up, which should
tions in targeted countries had received institutional
also address the stalemate that existed between
strengthening, enabling them to promote sustain-
UN-Habitat and the CPR.
able urbanization at the national and regional levels.
There were 112 cities implementing urban planning,
management, and governance with support from
UN-Habitat partners.
18 UN-Habitat, 2009, Assessment – Excellence in Management:
Programme Agreement between UN-Habitat and Norway 2008-
2009, prepared by Stein-Erik Kruse.
26 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
Access to land and housing for all (Focus Area 3): • Strategic planning and programming and
A total of 28 countries were in the process of im- results-based management were applied based
plementing policies to improve access to land and on the perception that the organization’s sub-
housing with support from UN-Habitat. The Global stantive programmes should produce results
Land Tool Network (GLTN) – a global mechanism to aimed at achieving the organization’s vision
promote land reform – increased its partners to 40 and strategic goals. Through the use of SMART
organizations. Nineteen countries were implement- indicators, actual programmatic results can be
ing policies to improve security of tenure, including measured against baselines and targets. The
reduction of forced evictions. Twenty-four countries degree of achievements can in turn be used
were implementing slum prevention and improve- for making strategic decisions regarding the
ment policies with UN-Habitat support. future direction of programmes and allocation
of resources.
Environmentally sound basic urban infrastructure
and services (Focus Area 4): The capacity of 92 part- • Results and indicators for each Focus Area
ner institutions was strengthened through the Wa- were developed in consultation with all the
ter and Sanitation Programmes in 2009. As a result, divisions. This contributed to better integration
about one million people were receiving safe drink- and collaboration among divisions by focusing
ing water and basic sanitation. UN-Habitat aware- on expected results of UN-Habitat. However,
ness raising and capacity building had increased the systematic collection of necessary data and
demand for water and sanitation services. information was still a challenge, due to insuffi-
cient capacity.
Strengthening human settlements finance systems
• A Resource Mobilization Unit was established
(Focus Area 5): UN-Habitat leveraged resources
by end of 2009, with three staff, to increase
through the Slum Upgrading Facility and the Exper-
financial resources to deliver MTSIP results. A
imental Reimbursable Seeding Operations (ERSO)
plan for implementing the Resource Mobiliza-
aiming at providing affordable housing and in-
tion Strategy was prepared. A multi-year pro-
frastructure. About USD 1 million was disbursed
gramme agreement was signed with Sweden,
through the Slum Upgrading Facility in 2009 and
while the Government of Spain had indicated
USD 714,286 was disbursed through ERSO in 2009.
its willingness to do likewise. Actions to mobi-
UN-Habitat increased capacity in municipal finance
lize resources from non-traditional donors such
in pilot countries (Ghana, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and
as the Islamic Development Bank, Coca Cola
Tanzania).
and Google.org were initiated.
Excellence in management (Focus Area 6):
The review of Focus Area 6, Assessment – Excellence
• Several dimensions to staff empowerment were in Management: Programme Agreement between
addressed, including: a) promotion of a strong UN-Habitat and Norway 2008-2009 commissioned
leadership with a shared strategic vision; b) by Norway concluded that the new Results Frame-
aligning of staff skills to the new plan; c) a set work had provided a new corporate vision and that,
of business processes, systems and procedures by focusing on results, had led to the understanding
which were designed to promote efficiency; and of the need for collaboration and less fragmenta-
d) organizational structure that would facilitate tion. The new Programme Review Committee was
effectiveness in achieving results. UN-Habitat launched in October 2009 to facilitate strengthened
conducted a staff survey as a means of measur- quality assurance in the programme development
ing organizational effectiveness in 2009. The phase.
overall average score was 2.7 on a scale of 1-5.
Enhanced Normative and Operational Framework:
By the end of 2009, there were improvements
recorded in business processes, for instance, The policy and strategy papers for the five sub-
average time of recruitment was reduced from stantive Focus Areas were revised with greater en-
265 days in 2008 to 177 days in 2009. gagement of the regional offices to better establish
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
27
how Focus Area results could be delivered across 2011, was focused on programmatic aspects
divisions. Through a combination of the operational against a background of continuing
capacity of the regional offices and normative ex- institutional reform. There was a need to
pertise at Headquarters, several priority countries revisit the indicators of achievements in the
received support. A total of 33 integrated Habitat results framework;
Country Programme Documents were prepared to
b. The existing organizational structure was not
strengthen engagement with governments, United
optimal for the effective delivery of the plan’s
Nations Country Team and in the UN DAF processes.
envisaged results. The alignment of the
Information about the UN-Habitat country level
agency’s human resources with the plan’s
expected accomplishments and implementation
Focus Areas had to be completed;
arrangements in relation to the MTSIP was made
available in the Country Activities Report 2009 that c. The plan had established a number of the-
included 50 countries. matic priorities based on the Habitat Agenda,
which led to the identification and reformu-
lation of strategic entry points for the pro-
5.3 Summary of the 2009/10 Peer
gramme20. There was no evidence that major
Review of the MTSIP
activities had been dropped or resources
The Peer Review of the Implementation of redirected – on the contrary, a number of new
UN-Habitat’s Medium-Term Strategic and Institu- priorities had been adopted;
tional Plan concluded that the implementation of
d. Although ‘sustainable urbanization’ was
MTSIP had helped to establish a stronger common
central to the strategic goal driving the plan’s
vision for UN-Habitat, create more enthusiasm and
five substantive Focus Areas, the concept had
commitment among its staff, and reduce internal
not been adequately defined. While the plan
barriers through better collaboration and greater
presented five substantive priorities covering
focus on shared results. MTSIP had also led to
important aspects of the UN-Habitat mandate,
strengthened normative and operational linkages
those responsible for the five corresponding
and an increased results orientation through the
Focus Areas did not always communicate well
MTSIP Results Framework. Using the principles of
with one another. The policy and strategy
results-based management, UN-Habitat had devel-
papers need to be viewed together with the
oped a chain of results for each Focus Area using
Habitat Country Programme Documents;
participatory approaches. It was found, however,
that the time had come to emphasize a program- e. Although the plan’s results framework ar-
matic reform and examine UN-Habitat’s program- ticulated SMART results and performance
matic focus. The five Focus Areas covered important indicators for all six Focus Areas, there had
aspects of UN-Habitat’s mandate, yet they had not been a tendency to reduce results to numeri-
been effectively and consistently elaborated and cal indicators, even for roles and activities for
communicated. which other types of indicators could have
been more appropriate;
The findings of the peer review19 raised a number of
issues that were deemed very relevant to the pres- f. Coordination between global, regional and
ent evaluation. An abstract of the main findings, country activities was often based on infor-
conclusions and recommendations that were impor- mal mechanisms that lacked clear roles and
tant to this evaluation is presented below: formalized systems. With an expanding level
of activities at the regional and national levels,
a. The first phase of the plan’s implementation, and an increased emphasis on a combined
during the biennium 2008-2009, was focused normative and operational approach, the
on the institutional aspects of the reform. The current situation was unsatisfactory. There was
second phase during the biennium 2010- a need for more formal structures to link the
19 Abstracts from UN-Habitat, 2011, Proposed work programme plan’s Focus Areas to the regional offices and
and budget for the biennium 2012-2013: Report of the
Executive Director, Addendum, Midterm review of the
improved mechanisms for coordination;
implementation of the MTSIP for the period 2008-2013. 20 The biennial work programmes
28 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
g. The distinction between the organization’s Some of the Peer Review’s key recommendations
normative and operational roles was often un- were: a) UN-Habitat should clearly define policy and
clear. While there was clearly an improved un- programme priorities for the short and long-term; b)
derstanding of the need for integration within an overarching paper that would link the individual
the programme, most resources for coun- policy and strategy papers and define key common
try-level activities were mobilized by regional concepts – including “sustainable urbanization” –
offices for operational activities that often had should be prepared; c) the individual Focus Area
insufficient normative elements and feedback policy and strategy papers should be standardized
mechanisms for organizational learning; to obtain greater uniformity, quality, and focus on
the ENOF and crosscutting issues; and d) regional
h. The planning structure was complex, with
offices should play a more active role in promoting
several levels, and involved a large number of
a comprehensive and coherent normative and oper-
documents. The work programme and budget
ational vision.
lacked details on prioritization and linkages to
resource allocation. The cost of maintaining Two of the peer review’s lessons learned were: 1)
two separate planning and reporting systems, one unintended consequence of the adoption of
i.e. one for MTSIP and one for the biennial MTSIP was the creation of overlapping systems of
work programme was high. More importantly, data collection and reporting, which created con-
however, the existence of two systems side by fusion and much additional work; and 2) major re-
side appeared to have created confusion in views at the organizational level (such as the peer
part of the programme; review) are complex and therefore would require
i. The dependence on a small group of major considerable time and resources – and should not
donors was considered the most critical risk be undertaken more often than every two years.
for UN-Habitat. While the gap had narrowed,
the imbalance between earmarked and non-
-earmarked funds remained a challenge that
would have to be addressed as a matter of
priority.
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
29
UN-Habitat Executive Director, Dr. Joan Clos, Minister of Social Development, Mr. Heriberto Felix Guearra and the
Governor of Augascalientes, Mr. Carlos Lozano De La Torre during 2011 World Habitat Day global celebration, in
Augascalientes, Mexico. © UN-Habitat/Julius Mwelu
6.1 Focus Area 1: Advocacy, Moni- Results: outputs, outcomes and impacts
toring and Partnership for The trends of indicators of achievements from the
Sustainable Urbanization baseline in 2009 to end of 2013 are presented in
The aim of Focus Area 1 is to raise awareness of sus- Table 6.1.
tainable urbanization issues among governments,
local authorities, and Habitat Agenda partners. The Expected Accomplishment 1: Improved
strategic result of the Focus Area is the adoption of awareness of sustainable urbanization
improved sustainable urbanization policies from lo- issues at national and global levels
cal to global levels. The strategies of the Focus Area
a. Number of media articles on flagship reports: The
are based on three pillars: i) effective advocacy; ii)
number of media articles on the State of the World’s
partnerships that will play a catalytic role in the
Cities report was recorded at 25,000 in 2011, ex-
achievement of sustainable urbanization; and iii)
ceeding the target by 56 per cent. Improved aware-
monitoring of urbanization conditions and trends.
ness and policy guidance on urbanization issues
UN-Habitat collaborates with parliamentarians,
was achieved through increased production and
public sector agencies, universities, local authorities,
dissemination of knowledge products through flag-
civil society organizations, youth organizations, pro-
ship publications and strategic use of advocacy plat-
fessionals, and private sector partners.
forms – mainly through the World Urban Forum,
30 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
Notes: 1) The baseline information is taken from the November 2009 six-monthly progress report; 2) there is no information
for Expected Accomplishment 2 in the December 2010 six-monthly progress report; and 3) local authorities appear in 2009,
but are combined with national governments in the 2011 Annual Report.
World Habitat Day, and the World Urban Campaign, State of Asian Cities report was prepared in 2010.
global events, conferences and meetings. The themes of these publications, for example ‘City
and Climate Change’ and ‘Bridging the Urban Di-
The two flagship publications – the Global Report
vide’ served as the themes for advocacy platforms
on Human Settlements and the State of the World’s
for the Fifth Session of the World Urban Forum and
Cities report – focused on specific priority topics.
World Habitat Day celebrations.
The editions of the Global Report on Human Set-
tlements for 2009 and 2011 were Planning Sus- A recent survey of the use of UN-Habitat’s two flag-
tainable Cities and Cities and Climate Change, re- ship reports and the Best Practices Database by se-
spectively. The 2008/2009 and 2010/2011 editions lected Habitat Agenda Partners revealed that a high
of the State of the World’s Cities reports focused number of the academic and training institutions
on the themes of ‘Harmonious Cities’ and ‘Bridg- were using the Global Report on Human Settle-
ing the Urban Divide’, respectively. There is a grow- ments (74 per cent) and the State of the World’s
ing demand for these reports at the regional level, Cities (69 per cent) in their programmes. The reports
which is influencing policy debates and decisions at and the database are also used as resource materials
national and local levels. State of African Cities re- for: capacity building of development practitioners
ports were prepared in 2008 and 2010 and the first (34 per cent); policy formulation (27 per cent); train-
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
31
ing activities at the postgraduate level (90 per cent); reads in 2010, realizing a 67 per cent increase. All
and undergraduate level (39 per cent). The flagship publications on Scribd.com can now be read on
reports were included in academic curricula by part- mobile devices through a digital reading service
ners (69 per cent for Global Report on Human Set- called Float. Ongoing efforts to produce the quar-
tlements and 59 per cent for State of the World’s terly magazine Urban World and other UN-Habitat
Cities). Also, some 71, 61 and 29 per cent of the publications for mobile devices such as the iPad,
partners reported that they were using the Global iPhone, and Kindle are expected to further increase
Report on Human Settlements, State of the World’s the dissemination of information on sustainable ur-
Cities and the Best Practice Database, respectively, banization.
as core reference for research.
c. Number of countries with National Urban forums:
Enhanced policy coherence in the management A growing number of countries have established a
of human settlement issues in the United Nations National Urban Forum as platforms for awareness
system is also reflected in the incorporation of sus- raising and policy debate on sustainable urban is-
tainable urban development issues in the report of sues. National Urban Forums play an important role
the United Nations High Level Committee on Pro- in linking the normative and operational work at
grammes in its March 2011 meeting, and in the de- country level. Countries with Habitat Programme
liberations of the Executive Committee for Economic Managers and those with already established Na-
and Social Affairs. In raising awareness on sustain- tional Urban Forums are the most active with elab-
able urbanization, the United Nations Commission orate advocacy and learning events. The number of
on Sustainable Development (UNCSD), reached an countries with established National Urban Forums
important milestone in policy improvement, with as platforms for promoting sustainable urbanization
the adoption of urban mobility and pro-poor sani- and adequate shelter for all, reached 35 in 2011.
tation as critical ingredients for sustainable develop- UN-Habitat continued to provide technical and lim-
ment, in its outcome document, in May 2011. ited financial support for the establishment and
strengthening of forums through the Habitat Pro-
b. Number of downloads from UN-Habitat web-
gramme Managers. UN-Habitat continued to sup-
site on sustainable urbanization materials: The de-
port National Urban Forums in 13 countries (Burkina
mand for and use of UN-Habitat’s flagship reports
Faso, Cuba, Fiji, Ghana, Lebanon, Malawi, Mozam-
increased significantly in 2011. More than one mil-
bique, Nepal, Nigeria, the Philippines, Rwanda, Sen-
lion downloads on sustainable urbanization were
egal, and Vietnam).
recorded, exceeding the target by 20 per cent. The
most downloaded of UN-Habitat’s flagship reports The World Urban Forum and World Habitat Day are
were State of the World’s Cities 2010/2011: Cit- increasingly becoming significant global advocacy
ies for All: Bridging the Urban Divide and State of and learning platforms. More than 10,000 partici-
the World’s Cities 2008/2009: Harmonious Cities, pants attended the Fifth Session of the World Urban
which recorded 23,610 and 13,510 downloads re- Forum, held in Rio de Janeiro in 2010. The 2011
spectively. The report on Interlocking Stabilised Soil World Habitat Day was celebrated in 65 countries
Blocks and The Challenge of Slums - Global Report and recorded 250 events compared to 239 events
on Human Settlements 2003 had 10,397 and 9,904 in 79 countries in 2010. The global celebrations of
downloads respectively. Since its launch in March World Habitat Day in 2011 in the city of Aguas-
2011, the full version of the Global Report on Hu- calientes, Mexico, attracted over 3,000 participants.
man Settlements: Cities and Climate Change was The World Expo in Shanghai in 2010 attracted over
downloaded 3,643 times, while its abridged edition 3 million visitors to the United Nations Pavilion and
was downloaded 7,553 times in English, French, 150 events were held related to sustainable urban-
Spanish, Russian, Chinese, and Arabic. ization. UN-Habitat coordinated the global celebra-
tions of the 2011 World Water Day, which were
In 2011, UN-Habitat publications on Scribd.com
held in March 2011 in Cape Town, South Africa.
recorded 388,364 reads, compared with 232,934
32 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
Expected Accomplishment 2: Habitat The World Urban Campaign has significantly raised
Agenda partners actively participate global awareness on urban issues. More than 50
in the formulation of the sustainable partners – including professionals, civil society and
urbanization policy the private sector – are part of the World Urban
a. Number of partnerships contributing to sustain- Campaign and five United Nations agencies (ILO,
able urbanization increased: In 2011, UN-Habitat International Telecommunications Union and United
signed cooperation agreements with 188 partners. Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduc-
These partnerships included 73 international organi- tion, Universal Postal Union, and WHO) have also
zations, 40 national governments and local author- associated their own global campaigns with the
ities, 31 private sector organizations, 20 training World Urban Campaign. Eight umbrella organiza-
institutions, and 24 youth groups. The increase in tions have made commitments (through MOUs) to
partnerships indicates increased participation in the join the campaign on the agreed work and princi-
formulation and promotion of sustainable urbaniza- ples relating to sustainable urban development. Two
tion policies. networks, CitiScope (print) and South-South News
(electronic) have joined to promote the World Urban
The implementation of the UN-Habitat Partner- Campaign messages and principles. Youth-led orga-
ship Strategy is expected to help improve the en- nizations in urban areas are becoming important
abling environment, which in turn will facilitate Habitat Agenda partners through grants provided
UN-Habitat’s partners to work better with the rel- for youth empowerment and sustainable urbaniza-
evant divisions and sections/branches within the tion initiatives. Through its Urban Youth Fund initia-
Agency. At the twenty-third Session of the Gov- tive, UN-Habitat worked with 115 youth organiza-
erning Council, UN-Habitat formally approved the tions, which have received grants and implemented
Habitat Professionals Forum Charter: The role of activities worth USD 2 million.
human settlements professionals in delivering a
sustainable and equitable future, which is expected Expected Accomplishment 3: Monitoring of
to further improve UN-Habitat’s work with its part- sustainable urbanization conditions and
ners. The Urban Gateway, a global online portal for trends improved
partners, launched in 2010, is significantly enhanc-
a. Number of operational Urban Observatories: The
ing the sharing of information on urban issues and
Governing Council adopted a resolution at its 23rd
improving communication between UN-Habitat and
session that encourages countries to enumerate
its partners.
their slum populations, and set realistic national, re-
UN-Habitat strengthened its collaboration with gional and local targets for improving the lives of
agencies in the United Nations system, including slum dwellers. UN-Habitat continued to build the
International Labour Organization (ILO), UNDESA, capacity of national departments to monitor urban
United Nations inter-agency mechanism on energy indicators and assess urban conditions and trends.
(UN-Energy), UNEP, UNICEF, United Nations Institute By December 2011, UN-Habitat was supporting 82
for Training and Research, UNODC, United Nations national and local urban observatories. The infor-
inter-agency mechanism on water and sanitation mation collected and analysed was used in policy
related activities (UN-Water), WFP, WHO and the formulation and programme development for sus-
World Bank through joint initiatives and advocacy tainable urban development, and production of the
work in sustainable urban development. Beyond flagship reports.
the United Nations system, UN-Habitat continued
to consolidate relations with international organi- Effectiveness
zations, national governments, local authorities, the
As is evident from the foregoing achievements at
private sector, and youth organizations. UN-Habitat
both the global and country levels, awareness cre-
supported the capacity development of 26 local and
ation and promotion of sustainable urbanization
national government training institutions (from all
policies, programmes and practices have been sig-
regions) to formulate results and outcomes as an
nificantly effective in terms of quantitative achieve-
integral programme for strengthening local author-
ments. The monitoring of these policies and prac-
ities.
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
33
tices within the constraints of human and financial tive areas of specialization. The Global Urban Ob-
resources availability has also been effective. The servatory Programme assists countries and cities in
outcomes of Focus Area 1 have promoted aware- improving their capacity to design, access, manage
ness about sustainable urbanization policies at local, and analyse their information to enhance existing
national and global levels. The number of countries policy, planning, and decision-making mechanisms.
that have adopted policies, legislation and strategies The programme is also used to regularly update the
incorporating sustainable urbanization principles urban indicator database and provide urban statis-
was recorded to be 39 (under Focus Area 2), but the tical analysis for the State of the World’s Cities, re-
actual impact is not monitored. gional state of the cities reports, reports on youth
and gender, and the annual MDG Report. These and
Efficiency other factors enhance the continued relevance of
the Focus Area.
Progress on all three expected accomplishments of
Focus Area 1 has been satisfactory, although not
Sustainability
all targets for expected accomplishment 2 were
met, for example, national governments, training Provided that there are adequate human and finan-
institutions, civil society organizations, and private cial resources to sustain the momentum, the pro-
sector organizations. The annual budget estimate gramme is sustainable. Political support is also criti-
(Financial year 2011) for Focus Area 1 was USD 33.1 cal for the sustainability of Focus Area 1. A daunting
million, the allocated budget was USD 54.8 million; challenge remains resource adequacy and lack of
and the actual expenditures were USD 40.9 million relevant and consistent data at national and local
resulting in an utilization rate of 74.6 per cent. levels for advocating urban issues.
Notes: 1) 27 of the institutions were local government training institutions; 14 were universities; and 12 were local
government associations and regional/global local government training institutions; and 2) the implementation were in areas
of governance, safety, environment, and risks and crisis.
Expected Accomplishment 1: Improved Urban safety: At its 23rd Session the Governing
policies, legislation and strategies Council adopted a resolution for safer cities and
supporting urban planning, management urban crime prevention, which, among others led,
and governance to the formation of the Global Network for Safer
Urban planning: Policies, legislation and strategies Cities. A regional framework to foster international
are essential means of providing direction for urban cooperation for better access to public safety ser-
growth and governing urban affairs in support of vices was endorsed by 24 countries in Africa and the
sustainable urbanization. Examples from Asia and Arab States region. The General Organization for
the Pacific, Africa, and Latin America and the Ca- Physical Planning tool was piloted in African cities,
ribbean include: drafting of a regional strategy on and safety needs assessments were conducted in
inclusive urban planning, management and gov- other cities to provide information on crime trends.
ernance with the Geographic Information System A compendium on good urban safety practices has
(GIS) and spatial planning; local reviews of urban been developed that also includes slum areas. Sup-
planning legislation and policy; review of local gov- port for safer settlement planning has been pro-
ernance systems and development of action plans vided through development of guidance notes and
for undertaking reforms; revision of regulations capacity building.
concerned with national-local housing policy coor-
dination; and promotion of public spaces for more
inclusive cities.
36 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
Climate change: The Cities and Climate Change Ini- African Planning Schools (a network of 42 tertiary
tiative (CCCI) was initiated in 2008 and is a compo- planning institutions), which has developed a ‘Cli-
nent of SUD-Net. Since 2008, CCCI has developed mate Change and African Cities’ curriculum; b) the
tools to support national and city level activities University of Johannesburg, which has institution-
especially in four pilot countries (Ecuador, Mozam- alized local government training, based on ‘Strate-
bique, the Philippines and Uganda). By December gic Planning for Local Economic Development’; c)
2011, CCCI activities had expanded its scope to 20 the University of Botswana, which provides courses
countries focusing on urban planning approaches, on climate change, conducted a course in 2009
exploring linkages between urban governance and based on ‘Climate Change and Urban Planning’; d)
climate change actions, and promoting gender and a regional training institute in Kenya that offers a
youth inclusive responsive networks. The approach wide range of urban planning, management and
and tools used in the United Nations system to sup- governance training for local authority personnel in
port cities to take action on mitigation and adaption East Africa; and e) the International Urban Training
to climate change were documented and became Centre in Asia that offered seven regional training
better known as a result of UN-Habitat’s coordina- courses on urban planning, management and gov-
tion of ten United Nations agencies at a UNFCCC ernance. UN-Habitat also developed a guidebook
side event in Cancun in December 2010 – some of entitled Local Action for Biodiversity, published in
the elaborated strategies were integrated into the 2010, for Governments to support cities and local
implementation plans of the Cities and Climate authorities in the implementation of the Convention
Change Initiative (CCCI). UN-Habitat contributed on Biological Diversity.
to the preparation of The Fifth Assessment Report
Cooperation with other United Nations agencies:
of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
The United Nations Advisory Committee of Local
(IPCC) that will be finalized in 2014. A major contri-
Authorities (UNACLA) – for which UN-Habitat serves
bution in 2011 to global efforts on climate change
as secretariat – is promoting sustainable principles
issues was the publication of the Global Report
and good practices in urban mobility, job creation
on Human Settlements 2011: Cities and Climate
and local productivity, environmental resilience, and
Change that provided evidence-based documenta-
municipal finance through the implementation of a
tion on the linkages between climate change and
four-year work programme aimed at demonstrating
cities. Governments have begun to pass by-laws and
the integration of these issues into urban planning,
undertake concrete activities to enhance climate re-
management and governance. UN-Habitat devel-
siliency and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
oped the Introductory Handbook on Policing Urban
Risk reduction in crisis-prone and post-crisis: By De- Space in partnership with UNODC, and the curricu-
cember 2011, UN-Habitat was supporting 11 coun- lum addressing urban policing in partnership with
tries towards incorporating urban risk and vulnera- the Institute of Public Security in Barcelona and part-
bility reduction measures and established an IASC ners in the Police Platform for Urban Development.
Task Force in early 2011 on Meeting the Human-
Cooperation with cities and municipalities: More
itarian Challenges of Urban Areas. UN-Habitat is
than 20 municipalities in East Africa have benefitted
jointly working with UNEP, UNFPA and UNICEF on a
from a diploma course on urban development pre-
reconstruction programme in Haiti. In Afghanistan,
pared and managed by the Lake Victoria City Devel-
UN-Habitat has assisted with policy preparation for
opment Strategies Initiative (an initiative supported
informal settlement upgrading with a view to reduc-
by UN-Habitat for improved urban environment and
ing risks and vulnerability.
poverty reduction) in collaboration with the Institute
of Housing and Urban Development Studies of Eras-
Expected Accomplishment 2: Strengthened
mus University. Enda Tiers Monde has, in collabo-
institutions promote inclusive urban
ration with UN-Habitat, supported municipalities in
planning, management and governance
Senegal in participatory budgeting. About 3,000
Cooperation with training institutions: UN-Habitat local government staff in Liberia have been trained
established partnerships with a number of training in leadership development, urban financial manage-
institutions that draw on UN-Habitat’s experiences, ment, and local economic development.
which among others include: a) the Association of
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
37
and track efforts in terms of outcomes instead of stantive Focus Areas of the MTSIP.
outputs and activities – however, more needs to be
The Global Land Tool Network (GLTN) was launched
done. It would be useful to focus and report on one
in June 2006 with the goal to contribute to pov-
city (or country) to demonstrate aggregated results
erty alleviation and the MDGs through land reform,
of UN-Habitat achievements. Correspondingly, a
improved land management and security of ten-
monitoring information system to support evidence
ure. The GLTN is implemented by UN-Habitat and
based planning would assist in recording the results
is funded by the Government of Norway and the
that have been achieved. In parallel with collecting
Swedish International Development Cooperation
inputs for external reporting, a clearly separate pro-
Agency (SIDA). The project’s commencement pre-
cess for capturing lessons that will be used for inter-
dates (2006) and was subsequently integrated into
nal reflection should be established.
the MTSIP. The GLTN was scheduled to run until
The exclusive focus of indicators on quantitative 31 December 2011. A Mid-Term Evaluation of the
measures and the limited resources availed for nor- Global Land Tool Network was undertaken from
mative work that underpins the long-term success August 2009 to March 201021. Working with its
of the operational activities remains a major chal- partners, GLTN aims to identify and develop land
lenge. The non-sectoral approach of Focus Area 2 is tools to support innovations in pro-poor and gen-
an asset for UN-Habitat as it provides added value der appropriate tools that are affordable and can be
particularly at the city level. applied at scale. GLTN advocates for progressive ap-
proaches, and develops the global knowledge base
6.3 Focus Area 3: Promotion of through evaluation of innovative land programmes
Pro-poor Land and Housing and conduct of priority research. The GLTN aims at
improving global coordination on land and strength-
The aim of Focus Area 3 is to help create the nec-
ening of existing land networks. It promotes the es-
essary conditions for concerted international and
tablishment of a continuum of land rights, rather
national efforts to stabilize the growth and prolif-
than just focus on formal land titling.
eration of slums and set the stage for the subse-
quent reduction in the number of slum dwellers and
Results: outputs, outcomes and impacts
reversal of the current trend of uncontrolled urban
slum proliferation. The strategic result is improved The trends of indicators of achievements from the
access to land and housing, security of tenure, and baseline in 2009 to end of 2013 are presented in
slum improvement and prevention, all of which rely Table 6.3.
on three crosscutting strategies: 1) knowledge man-
agement and advocacy; 2) capacity building at the Expected Accomplishment 1: Improved land
global and regional levels; and 3) supporting imple- and housing policies implemented
mentation at the country and local levels. The issues
Reform, modernization and improvement of existing
of gender, youth and the elderly are mainstreamed
land policies, including access and tenure systems,
into the approach.
and housing delivery systems, land and housing re-
At the country level, UN-Habitat’s engagement in form in general, were and are being undertaken.
land and housing issues were shaped by: govern-
The Global Shelter Strategy to the Year 2000 that
ments’ demand, where there is a commitment to
was adopted by the United Nations General Assem-
policy reform; and countries undergoing post-disas-
bly in 1988 advocated for the need to shift housing
ter and post-conflict processes, where assistance to
policies away from an exclusive focus on building
housing- and land-related issues are at the top of
houses to a more holistic approach, which would
the agenda. Focus Area 3 programmes and projects
include government interventions related to land,
towards improving and promoting more productive
finance, regulations, planning, infrastructure and
land and housing policies were being implemented
housing markets.
in partnership with governments and other Habitat
Agenda Partners. There is a substantial scope for in- 21 UN-Habitat, 2011, Mid-Term Evaluation of the Global Land Tool
Network, Evaluation Report 3/2011, prepared by G. Collet and
teraction between Focus Area 3 and the other sub- A. Burns
40 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
Note: 1) The new countries are Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Iraq and South Sudan.
The adoption of neo-liberal policies has implied Rio de Janeiro to assess regional trends, formulate
serious limitations, as documented in UN-Habitat’s the global housing strategy roadmap towards 2025,
Global Report on Human Settlements 2003: The and outline the methodology.
Challenge of Slums that revealed a remarkable in-
Vulnerable groups in Africa may gain more equita-
crease in the population living in slums to nearly 1
ble access to land as a result of the Land Policy Ini-
billion people.
tiative Implementation Plan developed by the Afri-
At its twenty-third session in April 2011, the Gov- can Union Commission, UNECA and the AfDB, with
erning Council adopted a resolution requesting UN-Habitat support. The African heads of state, East
UN-Habitat to assess the results and impacts of the African Community (EAC), Economic Community of
Global Shelter Strategy to year 2000 and formulate West African States (ECOWAS) and Southern Afri-
a Global Housing Strategy to the Year 2025. The can Development Community (SADC) approved the
new strategy to year 2025 advocates for the need Land Policy Initiative framework and guidelines in
to radically shift housing theory and practice. The 2009. A number of partnership arrangements were
goal is to advance on the achievements and lessons developed to advance the main objective of Focus
learned with strategy to year 2000 and formulate a Area 1. An example is the Development Partners
global housing policy emerging from a broad-based Group on Land in Kenya, to promote improvement
national, regional and global consultation process, of land policies and access to affordable land with
which integrates housing policies into broader ur- secure tenure; establishment of Land Policy Advisory
ban planning strategies as well as into social, eco- Commission in Iraq, to initiate policy reform in the
nomic and environmental policies. land sector; development of the Social Tenure Do-
main Model, which aims to address the information
The process to develop a global housing policy doc-
requirements of unplanned settlements.
ument envisages critical benchmarks. Some of them
are associated with the Sixth and Seventh Sessions GLTN has promoted pro-poor land policies and pro-
of the World Urban Forum (2012, 2014), the Rio grammes through the capacity development work
+20 Conference in Rio de Janeiro (2012), the Hab- targeting government staff, practitioners, and Hab-
itat III Conference (2016), and the 24th and 25th itat Agenda partners. GLTN is developing pro-poor
session of the Governing Council (2013, 2015). An and gender appropriate land management and land
Expert Group Meeting was held in March 2012 in tenure tools with the participation of grassroots or-
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
41
ganizations. The Secretariat of GLTN had engaged partners. It is reported that overall, governments
both large and small partners in research, tool de- and Habitat Agenda partners had been mobilized to
velopment and training. It has been very success- progressively improve security of tenure and reduce
ful in encouraging and retaining a broad array of forced evictions in 28 countries over the years (2008
partner organizations from very different perspec- -2011), including in post-disaster and post-conflict
tives and backgrounds. By end of December 2011, situations. Specifically, the review of progress on Fo-
the network had partners from 48 organizations, cus Area 3 reports that:
up from 33 in 2008, with individual membership of
• Over the period (2008 -2011), strategies to
1,800 members from 142 countries. The partners
promote the full and progressive realization of
include international networks of civil society, inter-
the right to adequate housing have been devel-
national finance institutions, international research
oped and progressively refined, incorporating
and training institutions, donors, and professional
a rights-based approach in developing housing
bodies involved in the land sector.
policies and programmes. UN-Habitat’s nor-
The mid-term evaluation found that the GLTN had mative effort to promote alternatives to forced
been very effective in communicating technical and evictions became more structured through the
policy issues to different audiences, for example, Advisory Group on Forced Evictions and its
through the United Nations Commission for Sus- partners;
tainable Development and its involvement in the
• A comprehensive policy research review process
AU/ECA/AfDB22 framework and guidelines on land
of the full and progressive realization of human
policy in Africa. Successful messages include the
rights to adequate housing has been imple-
continuum of rights and the need for affordable,
mented by UN-Habitat, which enabled indig-
pro-poor, gender appropriate approaches to land
enous people in five Latin American countries
governance. In the area of strengthened capacity
(Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezu-
for land governance a considerable number of tools
ela) to progressively gain improved access to
have been developed or were in draft form at the
adequate housing;
time of the mid-term evaluation. Progress in test-
ing tools at the country level has been limited as • Significant progress has been made towards
GLTN country-level engagement is still at an early increased access to secure and affordable hous-
stage. GLTN efforts towards donor coordination at ing in Africa as a result of technical, financial,
the country level have made very important con- institutional and policy support from
tributions in Kenya, but expanding of the GLTN UN-Habitat, by raising awareness through
to other countries is constrained due to its lack of institutional platforms such as the African
presence. Nevertheless, by end of 2011, plans were Ministerial Conference on Housing and Urban
made to support donor coordination in Ethiopia (led Development (AMCHUD) and the Bamako Plan
by the World Bank), and country level support was of Action;
extended to Democratic Republic of Congo, Iraq, • Numerous tools and policy guides, including
Liberia, Myanmar (with UN-Habitat support) and gender sensitive ones, for improving land and
nine countries in the Eastern Caribbean region. As housing policies were developed and applied in
regards to institutional capacity, the GLTN has been a number of countries in Africa, Asia and the
successfully established with a continuously expand- Pacific, and Latin American and the Caribbean.
ing number of registered members and partners. Tool testing at country level is being undertaken
in Brazil, Ghana, Nepal, Tanzania and Uganda;
Expected Accomplishment 2: Security of
• The Policy Guide to Secure Land and Property
tenure increased
Rights for Indigenous People in Cities was
The Governing Council endorsed the continuum of developed by the GLTN and the UN-Habitat
land rights framework at its twenty-third session in Housing Policy Section to address problems
April 2011, which was further endorsed by 80 GLTN encountered as a consequence of urban expan-
22 African Union/ United Nations Economic Commission for Africa/ sion, migration, and long-standing discrimina-
African Development Bank
42 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
tions preventing indigenous people and other reforms to slum prevention was convoked and
vulnerable groups from enjoying their housing coordinated by UN-Habitat in June 2011 to
and property rights. share experiences and develop/strengthen the
capacity of practitioners and stakeholders from
• A number of disaster and conflict affected
all sectors – NGOs, community based organiza-
countries (Afghanistan, Burundi, Democratic
tions, academia, professional bodies and other
Republic of Congo (DRC), Haiti, Iraq, Liberia,
private sector entities. The resulting publica-
Somalia, South Sudan, Uganda, etc.) are pro-
tion Change by Design: Building Communi-
gressively promoting and institutionalizing land
ties Through Participatory Design was widely
conflict resolution and security of tenure using
disseminated;
tools and methodologies developed by
UN-Habitat. • UN-Habitat supported slum improvement
and prevention in a number of conflict and
Expected Accomplishment 3: Slum post-conflict countries, for example Colombia,
improvement and prevention policies Iraq, Nepal, Occupied Palestinian Territory, and
promoted Sri Lanka. UN-Habitat is also supporting the ‘Ur-
As of December 2011, 33 countries (17 in the Af- ban Partnerships for Poverty Reduction Project’
rica and Arab States region, ten in Asia and the Pa- in Bangladesh. The project is the largest urban
cific, one in Europe and five in Latin America and poverty reduction initiative in Bangladesh.
the Caribbean) were implementing slum prevention
Effectiveness
and improvement policies with UN-Habitat sup-
port, which is above the 2011 target of 26 coun- Overall, the expected accomplishments have been
tries. Twelve countries prepared slum upgrading partially achieved. It should be noted that the overall
and prevention programmes for implementation results of Focus Area 3 should take the contributions
with support from the Participatory Slum Upgrading of field projects and operations into account. Nor-
Programme and funding from the European Com- mative work of Focus Area 3, including promoting
mission. Slum improvement and prevention pro- secure tenure and alternatives to forced evictions
grammes and projects are progressively being pro- remain a challenge. Results based management has
moted and supported by UN-Habitat. Between 30 been the weakest link, as some of the indicators of
and 40 countries in various regions and sub-regions achievements could have been better formulated to
of the world are implementing slum prevention and assess results and impacts vis-à-vis planned activities
improvement programmes and policies supported and available resources. Human resource allocation
by UN-Habitat. Specifically: and the appointment of specialized staff needs to
be increased.
• In collaboration with some Habitat Agenda
partners (including Cities Alliance, GIZ, IADB
Efficiency
and WBI), UN-Habitat has, within the frame-
work of Focus Area 3, completed the revision Progress on Focus Area 3, for all its three expected
of the National Slum Upgrading Frameworks of accomplishments, has been satisfactory. The annual
nine countries, (Brazil, Chile, Colombia, India, budget estimate (Financial Year 2011) for Focus
Indonesia, Morocco, South Africa, Thailand and Area 3 was USD 25.4 million, the allocated budget
Tunisia), and are replicating the exercise in five was USD 106.2 million; and the actual expenditures
more countries (Bangladesh, Cote d’Ivoire, Ethi- were USD 84.1 million resulting in an utilization rate
opia, Ghana and Kenya). This has provided the of 79.1 per cent.
opportunity for knowledge sharing and capacity
Overall, human and financial resources were inad-
development;
equate. There was a lack of core resources to re-
• An international symposium/research workshop cruit staff to design programmes and initiatives
on participatory slum upgrading and policy to achieve the expected accomplishments of the
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
43
yet been tested widely at the global level. Ultimately, Joint implementation and collaboration with other
the sustainability relates to the benefits attained by Focus Areas was not supported or encouraged by
residents in the targeted urban and slum areas and the existing mechanisms and reporting system. This
how these are sustained over time. Impact evalua- is happening more often now due to organizational
tions on a country basis will be required to deter- reform. The MTSIP has been considered to lack pro-
mine the degree of sustainability. grammatically driven discussions, programmes, and
outputs among Focus Areas, thus limiting collabo-
In the short and medium-term, sustainability will be
ration. A framework for results and collaboration
dependent on the capacity of the GLTN Secretar-
among MTSIP Focus Areas for improving effective-
iat and the level of donor support. Having made a
ness could be improved. Results based management
promising start with advocacy, research and tool de-
has been a weak link as some of the indicators of
velopment, GLTN now needs to upscale the testing
achievements could have been better formulated to
of its tools at the country level to sustain its credibil-
assess results and impacts vis-à-vis planned activities
ity and expand its outreach outside of Kenya. GLTN
and available resources.
must also find mechanisms and means to support
this new phase of activity. Among the most impor- The Global Housing Strategy has triggered consid-
tant constraints facing the expansion of GLTN is its erable discussion and debate, both internally and
limited administrative and technical capacity in re- externally. There is a feeling that donors remain re-
lation to the ambitious programme of country level luctant to finance housing programmes despite the
activities planned. potential of housing stimulating economic growth.
Construction of a new water tank funded by UN-Habitat in Bondo,Kenya, 2011 © UN-Habitat/Julius Mwelu
Results: outputs, outcomes and impacts The United Nations Commission on Sustainable
The trends of indicators of achievements from the Development adopted urban mobility and pro-
baseline in 2009 to end of 2013 are presented in poor sanitation in its outcome from May 2011. The
Table 6.4. Water Operators’ Partnership of the Global Water
Operators Partnership Alliance (GWOPA) has been
23 UN-Habitat, 2001, Main Report of the First Water and institutionalized as a capacity building strategy
Sanitation Trust Fund – Impact Study, prepared by independent
consultants. The study was completed in January 2010, but the through different frameworks, for example the
final report was only released some time in 2011.
46 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
Note: 1) The survey for this indicator was not undertaken due to resource constraints; 2) 13 in Asia and the Pacific, 8 in Latin
America and the Caribbean, and 15 in Africa; and 3) information is not available (N/A) either due to lack of baseline studies or
performance monitoring.
United Nations Commission for Latin America and sustainable transport solutions for East African
the Caribbean (ECLAC), and the Agence Française cities’ project funded by the Global Environ-
de Développement (AFD). GWOPA has established ment Facility. AfDB provided a USD 110 million
partnerships with the Caribbean Development Bank grant in December 2010 to a second phase of
and the Development Bank of Southern Africa. Re- the Lake Victoria Region Water and Sanitation
gional achievements include: Initiative;
• Africa and Arab States: UN-Habitat contrib- • Asia and the Pacific: UN-Habitat supported a
uted to the policy dialogue on “Water and regional project on gender mainstreaming with
Urbanization”, which formed part of the main the Gender and Water Alliance. Partnerships
outcome of the third Africa Water Week in were forged with international agencies such as
Addis Ababa in November 2010. UN-Habitat UNDP and WHO to engage UN-Habitat in more
participated in the launch of the ‘Promoting sector based activities;
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
47
• Latin America and the Caribbean: The • Africa and Arab States: UN-Habitat has,
‘Central American Solid Waste Management through the Lake Victoria Region Water and
Technical and Institutional Assistance Initiative’ Sanitation Initiative, assisted the Lake Victoria
expanded its scope to include Honduras. As a Basin Commission of the East African Com-
result of activities under the Water for Cities munity (EAC) to establish the institutional
Programme, UN-Habitat was invited, alongside capacity for expanding access to water and
with the Inter-American Development Bank sanitation services in the region. UN-Habitat
(IADB) and the Water and Sanitation Group of was requested by the Community for Eastern
the Americas Water Forum, to lead pro-poor and Southern Africa (COMESA) to establish a
policy reforms in the water and sanitation similar programme for Lake Tanganyika with
sector across the region. The IADB funded possible funding from the EC. UN-Habitat de-
‘Improving Capacity for Solid Waste Manage- veloped an institutional framework for Water
ment Programme’ was expanded in the region and Sanitation for All in Africa in December
in partnership with the Spanish Development 2011 in collaboration with Water and Sanita-
Corporation Agency. tion for Africa.
The support to countries in all the three regions • Asia and the Pacific: International Council for
was mainly concerned with the water and sanita- Local Environmental Initiatives and UN-Habitat
tion sectors dealing with sector reforms, financ- jointly announced the EcoMobility project at
ing mechanisms and tariffs, and capacity building. the EcoMobility Changwon 2011 World Con-
The main countries of cooperation were: Bolivia, gress. Training on “Sustainable Urban Mobil-
Burkina Faso, Cambodia, El Salvador, India, Indone- ity” in Asian cities was conducted for research
sia, Kenya, Mexico, Nepal, and Pakistan. In Kenya, institutions and local governments from nine
water reform and legislative change were made in countries. Water utilities in the Mekong region
the Water Act and implemented in the water sector were strengthened in operations and mainte-
investment programme. In Nepal, the Solid Waste nance, project management, financial man-
Management Act was developed with support from agement, poverty mapping, GIS mapping, and
UN-Habitat. In India, UN-Habitat supported the wa- MDG monitoring.
ter policy reform and assisted in the finalization of
• Latin America and the Caribbean: The Solid
cities’ sanitation plans.
Waste Management Technical and Institutional
b. Number of institutions adopting mechanisms to Initiative concluded its first phase of sector
expand access to infrastructure: The utilities’ capac- assessment in five selected countries (ref.
ity worldwide to monitor performance changes as a Expected Accomplishment 1.a). UN-Habitat,
result of the Water Operators Partnership has been the Stockholm Environment Institute, and local
enhanced by the introduction of the GWOPA web stakeholders from five countries have pro-
tools such as the Geo-Referenced Utility Benchmark- moted the integration of sustainable sanitation
ing System (GRUBS). The École Nationale du Génie approaches.
Rural des Eaux et des Forêts – a major international The support to countries in all three regions was
training centre for water utility managers) in Mont- mainly concerned with the water resources and
pellier, France, has adopted the Waster Safety Plan supply, sanitation and solid waste management. The
approach following training that was prepared and main countries of cooperation were Bangladesh,
delivered by GWOPA in partnership with WHO, the Bolivia, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Madagascar, Mali,
International Water Association, and some cham- Mexico, Nepal, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sen-
pion utilities in Africa. UN-Habitat and the Interna- egal, and Tanzania. In Kenya, UN-Habitat has sup-
tional Ecological and Engineering Society made the ported efforts to promote appropriate food security
commitment in October 2011 to ensure that urban interventions with built in mechanisms to ensure re-
components are adequately addressed in the ‘Sus- silience and sustainable mitigation against drought
tainable Sanitation and Water Management’ tool- shocks.
box. Regional achievements include:
48 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
indicate that significant improvements in the level of hygiene education in Bolivia targeting school
satisfaction with water, sanitation and solid waste teachers and students ‘in one city’. The Guide
management services as a result of UN-Habitat in- for Educators and Students Handbook was
terventions. published.
b. Percentage of initiatives with a difference in the
Expected Accomplishment 3: Enhanced
price of basic infrastructure services: Lessons learned
consumer demand for efficient and
from UN-Habitat’s pro-poor approach in water and
environmentally sustainable basic urban
sanitation programmes show that the poor tend
infrastructure and services
to pay more for water. By facilitating pro-poor tar-
a. Percentage of consumers ranking basic urban in- iff setting, UN-Habitat’s interventions reduced the
frastructure services in the first three of their prior- price poor people had to pay. Through the water
ity needs: The ‘Monitoring to Inform and Empower and sanitation initiatives in the Lake Victoria Region
Platform’ launched during the Stockholm Water and Mekong some 25,000 additional people ben-
Week in March 2010, as a global online water and efitted from pro-poor water and sanitation tariffs.
sanitation monitoring system, is now operational, The support to countries focused mainly on water
which helps lower costs and increase the quality supply, sanitation, and solid waste management. In
and quantity of data collected. UN-Habitat hosted Mali, a biogas plant was piloted contributing to a
the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for reduction in fuel wood use. In Mongolia, streetlights
Water Supply and Sanitation Technical Task Force were provided to reduce crimes and accidents. The
Meeting on ‘Monitoring progress in water sup- main countries of cooperation were: Bolivia, Ethio-
ply and sanitation – Challenges in urban settings’ pia, Kenya, Mali, Mexico, Mongolia, Nicaragua, and
in June 2011, which resulted in an action plan for Senegal.
global MDG monitoring of urban water supply and
sanitation coverage. Regional achievements include: Effectiveness
• Africa and Arab States: Under the Lake Victoria UN-Habitat’s solutions to improve sustainable water
Region Water and Sanitation Initiative, about and sanitation service development for the urban
220,000 people have benefitted from improved poor, gender equality, and sector information are
water services through piped connections, widely recognized as critical. Gender mainstreaming
access to community managed water kiosks, strategies are of good quality. Though some of this
and rainwater catchment. Rapid water quality work has influenced policies, many mainstreaming
surveys were conducted in Kenya and Tanzania initiatives remain project focused, which limit their
in collaboration with public health and wa- impact. With some notable exceptions (for exam-
ter authorities. Water quality issues were also ple the Lake Victoria Region Water and Sanitation
addressed in Mali, where a project has been Initiative), gathering, processing and disseminating
launched to treat contaminated water. of gender-disaggregated data have not always been
• Asia and the Pacific: In the Mekong Region consistent, which makes it difficult to assess the
some 70,000 people have benefitted from im- achievements with respect to gender. Focus Area 4
proved water supply, 170,000 people from im- has made significant progress in strengthening the
proved sanitation, and 6,000 people from solid capacity of municipal service providers to deliver ef-
waste management. The improvements resulted ficient, reliable and cost-effective services.
in reduced cost of water, which previously could
The project activities on the ground are making sub-
be 15-20 times higher than that of consumers
stantial, strategic and direct impacts from a relative
that had access to piped water.
small investment. UN-Habitat has achieved signifi-
• Latin America and the Caribbean: Under a cant leverage on post pilot follow-up investments,
regional agreement, UN-Habitat led training especially with AfDB and ADB. However, the order
workshops in water, sanitation, and public of magnitude of the impacts of the Water and San-
50 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
itation Trust Fund interventions in Kenya and Ne- The six-monthly reports on Focus Area 4 results
pal is limited in terms of the increase in water and include water and sanitation programmes imple-
sanitation coverage required to achieve the MDGs. mented by the Regional Technical Cooperation Divi-
In Kenya, the trust fund’s projects were not imple- sion. This has been a first step in improving inter-di-
mented according to a country strategy and did visional collaboration. Weak collaboration, however,
not support core national strategic sector reform has hindered efficient use of both staff and finan-
processes. In Nepal, UN-Habitat is supporting a sec- cial resources across Focus Areas. More needs to be
tor-wide approach, but at the same time, the project done to strengthen collaboration with other Focus
portfolio contains a large number of small projects, Areas in planning, implementation, monitoring and
each aiming for replication at a larger scale. There is, reporting. Focus on results based management has
therefore, a need to shift the focus from pilot proj- ensured that the performance reporting of the Fo-
ect implementation to ‘strategic influencer’ of the cus Area has – as much as possible – remained at
urban sector – influencing policy and investment. results level achievements, and not activities and
inputs. Gender, youth and disaster have been main-
Efficiency streamed into Focus Area 4 programmes.
The Focus Area 4 team was actively involved in re- The sustainability of Focus Area 4 interventions re-
fining MTSIP – making it more focused and results lates closely to the quality of UN-Habitat interven-
oriented. The Focus Area 4 Performance Manage- tions and the extent to which these are requested
ment Data Sheet sets out clear objectives, expected by national and local governments and supported
accomplishments, strategic outputs and indicators. by donors and other partners – and in turn how
Lack of baseline data, upon which performance tar- these are transformed into national policies and leg-
gets are set, hampered the measurement/tracking islation. Ultimately, the sustainability relates to the
of progress. Funding and staff resources deployed benefits attained by residents in the targeted urban
to achieve the Focus Area 4 results were inadequate. and slum areas and how these are sustained over
time. Impact evaluations at country/local govern-
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
51
ment level will be required to determine the degree rolled out at the scale needed.
of sustainability.
The performance information sources for the Focus
The Impact Study of the Water and Sanitation Trust Area 4 Results Framework are inadequate – includ-
Fund showed that while project solutions are often ing lack of baseline data. Data on indicators has not
innovative and solve obstacles to serving the poor, been regularly collected due to lack of funds. There
achieving sustainability remains a significant chal- is therefore a need to upgrade impact monitoring,
lenge. The successful shift from pilot to sustainable including collection of baseline data that are gen-
service development requires additional project de- der-disaggregated. There is an ongoing review of in-
sign features. Even taking the excellent leverage ef- dicators with the intent of formulating good indica-
fect into account, the resources available to the trust tors, where data can be collected to track progress
fund are still far outstripped by the resources, ex- on Focus Area 4 results.
pertise, and implementation time needed to rollout
pilots at the scale necessary to meet the MDG goals. 6.5 Focus Area 5: Strengthened
Human Settlements Finance
Coherence Systems
The Impact Study of the Water and Sanitation Trust The aim of Focus Area 5 is to assist in achieving
Fund underscored the need for coherence at country the slum related MDG target. The strategic result is
level, coherence with the countries’ policies, strat- increased sustainable financing for affordable and
egies and development plans, and coherence with social housing and infrastructure by strengthening
donors. Such coherence can be attained through human settlement finance systems at micro level,
the adoption of the sector-wide approach and appli- particularly through lending and credit enhance-
cation of the Paris Declaration’s principles on aid ef- ment programmes in emerging and frontier econo-
fectiveness. The MTSIP was envisaged to increase in- mies, and to mobilize public and private investment
ter-Focus Area collaboration in programme planning in shelter and basic services. Focus Area 5 results
and execution. This aim proved difficult to achieve are attained through two main programmes: 1)
due to the ‘silos syndrome’ in the organization. The the Experimental Reimbursable Seeding Operations
consolidation of basic urban services (water, sanita- (ERSO) Revolving Loan Fund Programme; and 2) the
tion, solid waste, transport, and energy) into one Slum Upgrading Facility (SUF) – a grant programme.
thematic Focus Area will strengthen synergies with UN-Habitat intended to fill a vital niche – in collab-
other Focus Areas such as urban planning, urban oration with the International Finance Corporation
governance, and urban economy. The energy and (IFC), the World Bank, and other major international
transport components of Focus Area 4 have grown finance players – in producing excellent knowledge
significantly with support from the GEF. on local government finance and housing finance
systems. Extensive partnerships at the global, re-
Lessons learned gional, national and local levels – in a sensitively
gender balanced manner –were envisaged.
The Impact Study of the Water and Sanitation Trust
Fund demonstrated the need for: increased engage-
ment in national policy dialogue and involvement Results: outputs, outcomes and impacts
of key government policy makers, and promotion The trends of indicators of achievements from the
of a sector-wide approach and donor coordination, baseline in 2009 to end of 2013 are presented in
and adjustment of country support strategies with Table 6.5. The initial expected accomplishments
increased focus on the role as strategic influencer. were replaced in the course of implementing Focus
This may require a shift in staffing profiles to attain Area 5.
a better balance between pilot project implementa-
tion to increased policy engagement, and increased Expected Accomplishment 1: Financing raised
attention at an earlier stage on follow-up financing for and increases recorded in affordable
from pilot projects to ensure that solutions can be
and social housing stock and related infra-
structure
52 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
Note: 1) This indicator replaced the previous two indicators as indicated in the Results Framework: a) Level of municipal sector
activity; and b) Level of affordable housing finance sector activity; and 2) information is not available (N/A) either due to lack
of baseline studies or performance monitoring.
a. Value of commercial loans, government subsidies, were concluded in Ghana, Indonesia, Sri Lanka,
and donor grants: Two financial service programmes and Tanzania through local finance facilities for
were used to fulfil the expected accomplishment: building new homes or for commercial stalls
the revolving loan fund ERSO and the SUF’s grant and stores. An independent end-of-programme
programme. evaluation conducted in 2011 showed that the
bulk of the success was in the strengthening of
• The donor grants for ERSO came from the gov-
the local finance facilities and the impact they
ernments of Spain and Bahrain and the Rocke-
were having on national policy. The evaluation
feller Foundation totalling USD 3.7 million.
recommended that the programme be scaled
ERSO succeeded in making five seed funding
up, and support to the local facilities main-
loans totalling USD 2.75 million for projects in
tained during the programme period.
Nepal, Nicaragua, Occupied Palestinian Terri-
tory, Tanzania and Uganda. The loans are still b. Percentage of housing loans by domestic banks
running and are estimated to have reached and micro-finance institutions going to lower-in-
some 8000 beneficiaries as of December 2011. come deciles and/or people with informal incomes:
All loans are performing to schedule with a loan A survey would be required to indicate progress on
recovery rate at 100 per cent; this indicator. Performance monitoring has been un-
dertaken on the number of low-income households
• The donor grants for the Slum Upgrading
directly benefitting from housing loans through do-
Facility amounted to USD 19.2 million. Of the
mestic banks and micro finance institutions collabo-
amount, agreements worth USD 6,524,684
rating with ERSO.
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
53
Expected Accomplishment 2: Increase and structure for transfer of the SUF programme,
in activities in municipal finance and so far, there is no viable alternative. With no donors
affordable housing finance interested in continuing to fund the programme,
a. Funding raised and leveraged for municipal fi- the Executive Director decided that UN-Habitat’s
nance: Aside from the USD 3,629,597 raised for involvement with the SUF programme, as a grant
the four-year ERSO field-test, there has not been programme, would officially end on 31 December
much progress in the raising of funds for munici- 2011.
pal finance activities. Much of the work done on The Evaluation of the Experimental Reimbursable
municipal finance has been on normative research Seeding Operations25 conducted in 2011, proposed
and development aspects of the programme. Focus options for the future of the programme and rec-
on municipal finance is also relatively recent. ERSO ommended, based on the lessons learned, a shift in
worked with a number of key partners including lo- the focus of UN-Habitat’s work in the area of human
cal banks, Overseas Private Investment Corporation, settlement financing towards normative approaches
the Middle East Investment Initiative, among oth- to the urban economy and the promotion of finance
ers, in various municipal activities. In addition, eight for urban upgrading, housing and basic services.
publications on human settlements finance systems However, it transpired that UN-Habitat is not well
were produced over the period of 2010-2011. The placed to continue ERSO, as the direct lender, given
publications are of high demand. the lack of continuous funding for lending activities
from external donors, and the administrative cost of
Effectiveness establishing a permanent lending programme. Ex-
Focus Area 5 has been of limited effectiveness. Ex- ploration of suitable partners to take over the lend-
pected accomplishments were partially achieved, ing operations is being sought.
but in view of UN-Habitat’s decision to terminate
its engagement in the programmes, the expected Efficiency
accomplishments are logically not fully achieved in Progress on Focus Area 5 for its two expected ac-
the remaining years of MTSIP. From the successive complishments has been mixed. It would seem
periodic (quarterly, six-monthly, annual and End- that the design of Focus Area 5 was weak from the
of-Programme Evaluation) progress report over the start. Some of its expected accomplishments and
period (2008 – 2011), it is clear that ERSO and the indicators of achievement did not logically follow
SUF were both operated on a pilot basis, and were from the objective of the Focus Area. Additionally,
initially successful and showed promise. expected accomplishments were heavily predi-
The End-of-Programme Evaluation of the Slum Up- cated on donor support and, as it turned out, do-
grading Facility Pilot Programme24 noted that most nor commitment to human settlements financing
participants from the Local Finance Facilities, the pi- is not predictable – making it difficult to undertake
lot team, programme management unit, and donor appropriate long-term planning and target setting.
agencies that were interviewed, had concluded that An earlier self-assessment by the Focus Area 5 man-
the initial goals and expectations of the SUF were agers judged that the initial indicators of achieve-
not realistic. The SUF pilot programme’s objectives ment for the SUF were not practical. Given that the
were adjudged to be much broader and much less initial managers of the Focus Area were changed,
specific to the extent that the Slum Upgrading Facil- the indicators they formulated, though no longer
ity had not yet managed “to take slum upgrading to applicable, could not be changed. The annual bud-
scale”, and that contrary to the initial expectations, get estimate (Financial Year 2011) for Focus Area
the SUF has not helped a single municipality mobi- 5 was USD 21.2 million, the allocated budget was
lize financing for infrastructure development from USD 18.3 million; and the actual expenditures were
local financial market nor attracted support from USD 13.1 million resulting in an utilization rate of
other international facilities or new donors. Despite 71.6 per cent.
attempts to pursue a suitable partner institution
24 UN-Habitat, 2011, End-of-Programme Slum Upgrading Facility 25 UN-Habitat, 2011, Evaluation of the Experimental Reimbursable
Pilot Programme, Evaluation Report 4/2011. Seeding Operations, Evaluation Report 6/2011.
54 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
Note: There are a number of minor inconsistencies when comparing end-of-year progress reports, as well as in the 2011
Annual Report.1) These figures are November 2010 report figures; 2) The figures are taken Quarterly Report on the financial
status of UN-Habitat, April 2012; 3) The 2013 target are taken from the 2012-2013 biennial work programme and are divided
by two to correspond an annual amount – like the other figures; 4) It is assumed that the indicator refers to a 1-5 scale; and 5)
N/A – No information is available, as the surveys have been postponed to 2012.
56 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
divisions; d) the Habitat Country Programme Docu- to 2012. There have been improvements in the in-
ments represent a basis for joint programming and ternal information and knowledge sharing through
fund raising; and e) there is a better understanding use of the new intranet (Habnet), the redesigned
of the normative role within the organization. It was website (www.unhabitat.org), directors meetings,
indicated that the investment in executive direction senior manager meetings, and divisional and Focus
and support for the reform process seemed to have Area retreats. Implementation of the Knowledge
been insufficient and that there was still weak ca- Management Strategy commenced in 2012 to sup-
pacity for the rollout of the results-based manage- port results based management. A major achieve-
ment system – in particular for data collection, anal- ment during 2011 was the introduction of the Ur-
ysis and feedback to planning. ban Gateway27.
The Organizational Effectiveness Indicator Staff c) Reduction in time spent of completion of selected
Survey from 2009 resulted in a score of 2.7 on a business processes complying with rules and quality
scale from 1 to 5, where 1 indicates a clear need standards: Initiatives introduced have continued to
for increased development, and 5 indicates a high improve business processes by reducing transaction
level of development. The survey included questions costs and time. Lessons learned from the ‘organiza-
on purpose and direction, learning, innovation and tional review’ were harnessed in redefining ongoing
change, external relationships, effective processes, business processes. For instance, approval of co-
resource management, and accountability. A total operation agreements now takes eight days down
of 456 respondents participated with a response from 11.6 days in 2008, and average recruitment
rate of 70 per cent. time is 170 days down from 274 days in 2008.
and reporting function; ber 2011 and January 201228. The peer review con-
cluded that: a) evaluations conducted are credible,
• Transparent definition of programme priorities;
balanced, producing reports of good quality, and
• Establishment of an independent evaluation that the evaluations have been found to be use-
function; ful; and b) UN-Habitat’s evaluations were used to
• Establishment of cooperation mechanisms at all influence decision-making and often feed into the
levels; planning of new interventions. However, as there is
little attention to strategic level evaluations, there is
• Strengthening of the programmatic aspects
a marginal influence on policy and strategy formu-
while continuing with the institutional reform;
lation.
• Intensification of efforts to raise the organiza-
b) Willingness to be held accountable for MTSIP
tion’s profile.
results: Staff are increasingly willing to be held ac-
In June 2011, the CPR approved the roadmap for countable for MTSIP results. Structures have been
preparing the Strategic Plan 2014-2019. The draft created, including the MTSIP Steering Committee,
Results Framework was presented to the CPR at its task forces on all MTSIP thematic areas, programme
meeting on 15 December 2011. The ‘Open-ended review committees at Headquarters and the regional
Contact Group was mandated to finalize Parts 1 offices, and focal points for MTSIP reporting.
and 2 of the proposed strategic plan by early Febru-
ary 2012, to enable the preparation of the biennial Expected Accomplishment 4: Financial
Strategic Framework for 2014-2015 by 17 February resources to deliver MTSIP results
2012. A draft of the strategic plan will be ready by available
the end of July 2012.
a) Degree to which resource targets for non-ear-
marked and earmarked funding are met: With re-
Expected Accomplishment 3: Results based
gard to resource mobilization, efforts have focused
management principles applied
on putting systems in place and providing required
a) Percentage of programmes and projects that information to support diversification and increased
are contributing to Focus Area results: There is an funding. A new edition of the catalogue UN-Habitat
overall improvement in programmatic alignment, Products and Services was issued and launched at
coherence and results focus, which is evident from the twenty-third session of the Governing Council.
the quality of project documents – especially the New communications and fundraising tools have
logframes – which, among others, is the result of been developed to harmonize resource mobilization.
training in results based management. For the first The Donor Information System has been enhanced
time, the biennial work programme and budget for and is updated and maintained regularly. Joint an-
2012-2013 (approved by the General Assembly in nual consultations with development partners have
December 2011) is fully aligned to the MTSIP Re- proved to be a valuable approach that contributes
sults Framework. The MTSIP reporting is more re- to the alignment of delivery of resources. Coop-
sults focused and includes resource allocation and eration agreements with Norway and Sweden for
utilization. MTSIP reporting to donors and CPR has 2012-2013 were finalized in 2011.
been harmonized – starting from June 2011 – as the
main development partners have agreed to adopt The first portfolio review of UN-Habitat (see Section
the reports submitted to the Governing Council for 4.6) was finalized assessing the financial and the-
their accountability requirements. In 2011, 16 eval- matic characteristics of all UN-Habitat’s programmes
uations were completed and conducted according and projects. This informed the organizational re-
to UNEG’s norms and standards. There has been a view and facilitated the consolidation of projects
notable progress in implementation of evaluation and programmes for the new project-based man-
recommendations. A peer review of UN-Habitat’s agement approach.
evaluation function was conducted between Octo- 28 UNEG, 2012, Professional Peer Review of the Evaluation
Function of UN-Habitat.
58 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
(USD Millions)
Regional
Programmes1 Share of
No. of No. of Total 2010 No. of No. of Total 2011
portfolio
projects countries budget budget projects countries budget budget
%3
Regional Office
55 25 31 15 8.4 54 24 31 13
for Africa
Somalia 12 1 15 7 3.9 11 1 17 6
Iraq 15 1 31 14 7.9 11 1 22 9
Regional Office
14 4 41 21 11.8 16 7 44 13
for Arabic States
Regional Office
for Asia and the 86 19 259 103 57.9 67 14 330 135
Pacific
Regional
Office for Latin
31 13 13 10 5.6 31 13 24 15
America and the
Caribbean
Technical Advisory
10 6 31 4 2.2 8 5 17 3
Branch/Europe
Notes: 1) Foundation and earmarked technical cooperation projects including regional and global projects; 2) as per 15
November 2011; and 3) share of 2010 budget.
The regional offices’ project portfolio (including new review of the staff structure in order to assure
global projects) constitutes about 80 – 86 per cent the Agency that staff resources are deployed in the
of total budget. This raises the issue of a balanced most effective and efficient manner.
deployment of staff to regional offices and coun-
The portfolio of the Regional Office for Asia and the
try teams. Table 6.7 shows the distribution of the
Pacific is unevenly distributed, with Afghanistan ac-
regional programmes among the regional offices
counting for 66 per cent of the expenditures. Even
(Democratic Republic of Congo, Iraq, Somalia and
without the Afghanistan portfolio, regional office
Sudan are not incorporated into the regional offices’
still remains the regional office with the highest level
portfolio). The Regional Office for Asia and the Pa-
of expenditures. The regional office manages 94
cific has by far the largest share (57.9 per cent) of
UN-Habitat field offices, of which 46 are located in
the portfolio. Many of the projects are generated
Afghanistan, with about 2,000 field staff. About 80
and negotiated at the regional and country levels.
per cent of the project portfolio is concerned with
The United Nations Board of Auditors carried out an peace building and response to conflicts, post-con-
external audit of the Regional Office for Asia and flicts, and disasters.
the Pacific in April 201131.
The staff members at the Regional Office for Asia
The auditors “found no significant errors, omissions and the Pacific have been assigned responsibili-
or misstatements during their work on the financial ties related to: MTSIP Focus Areas and global pro-
records kept at the regional office in Fukuoka and grammes; reporting and monitoring in relation to its’
that the design and the operation of the controls activities; liaison with donors and other partners ac-
that are in place were adequate”. tive in Asia and the Pacific; and country assignments,
implying that senior staff provide support to the
One of Board’s key findings was that there is an appar-
country teams in UN-Habitat supported countries.
ent imbalance in the allocation of staff posts between
Accounting for the field offices and field staff is han-
UN-Habitat’s regional offices and Headquarters
dled by the regional office, but the lack of common
when considering the level of expenditure, which
UN-Habitat operational manuals and guidelines is
is managed through the various offices (see Table
an issue that needs to be addressed. The regional
6.8). The Board recommended that UN-Habitat pro-
office has taken steps to align its operations with
vide the Board with the rationale for its current staff
the new Headquarters’ organizational set-up. The
structure and placement. If the existing rationale
2010 peer review’s observation and recommenda-
did not consider the agency’s key areas of expen-
tions confirm that deployment of UN-Habitat staff is
diture and activity, UN-Habitat should undertake a
an issue that needs further consideration.
Table 6.8: Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific professional staff compared with
portfolio size
Annual
Professional Professional Annual
budget3
staff posts staff posts % budget %
USD mn
Source: Management Letter – UN-Habitat Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific, September 2011
Notes: 1) Total Foundation and Technical Cooperation; 2) As at December 2010; and 3) Allotment for the year.
The peer review recommended that regional offices through increased delegation of authority and em-
should play a more active role in promoting com- powerment of staff, improved support mechanisms
prehensive and coherent normative and operational and systems, and a comprehensive review and ap-
visions between global divisions and Focus Areas proval system.
and country programmes. There are several exam-
There has been a tendency among the divisions to
ples of significant progress in UN-Habitat’s country
criticize rather than work together to achieve prog-
level work. To date, however, achievements have
ress. The ‘silo mentality’ still exists across divisions
not been systematically documented. UN-Habitat
and it will be important to break it down to achieve
should undertake a comprehensive independent
a harmonized environment. It might be useful to
assessment to document what has been achieved
create a matrix whereby there is a real cross-divi-
to date, learn lessons from implementation experi-
sional accountability for achieving results within the
ences, and identify mechanisms for systematically
priorities of Focus Area 6. The senior management
tracking its work at country level. The MTSIP has fo-
should play a larger role in championing the MTSIP.
cused on policy administrative reforms, but should
now concentrate more on staff composition, com- As a part of the United Nations Secretariat,
petency and commitment at all levels. UN-Habitat is influenced by policy and procedures
introduced on a regular basis, with different cost im-
These are preconditions for further success in the
plications. The change of recruitment systems from
implementation of the MTSIP.
Galaxy to Inspira has created significant problems
for all UN Secretariat entities, but impacted, in par-
Efficiency
ticular, on UN-Habitat as regards to the reduction
Progress on Focus Area 6 for its four expected ac- of recruitment delays. New recruitment policies and
complishments has been mixed. For most parts contract modalities also impeded the efforts to em-
progress has been slower than expected. The ex- power UN-Habitat. Some planned UN Secretariat
pected accomplishments of Focus Area 6 were very initiatives that were launched have proved to be dis-
ambitious compared to the actual staffing and re- tracting and time consuming to absorb.
sources allocated. New staff were recruited at a later
stage to complement the existing staff. Four years The transaction costs of numerous MTSIP reporting
into the MTSIP, some of the new staff have moved impacted seriously on staff time. This burden was
on. Growth in delivery and the volume of the overall eased over time, as many donors accepted harmo-
programme put additional pressure on staff. Over- nized reporting. The Donor Information Database,
all, human and financial resources were adequate, improved Habnet access, and the delegation of au-
but the time taken to utilize resources appropriately thority to divisions and regional offices, in respect
delayed progress, which was not anticipated from of signing cooperation agreements, have had a
the start. The annual budget estimate (Financial positive impact on the cooperation with UN-Habitat
Year 2011) for Focus Area was USD 10.1 million, partners.
the allocated budget was USD 11.7 million; and the
actual expenditures were USD 8.4 million resulting Relevance
in an utilization rate of 72 per cent. The relevance of Focus Area 6 remains high. With
the ongoing organizational review it will take on
There is a visibly strengthened and consolidated
a new dimension. The success of the new pro-
programmatic reporting system – linking MTSIP im-
ject-based structure will depend on a clear approach
plementation to financial expenditures. However,
and appropriate resource allocation.
better performance measurement is warranted. The
necessary evidence has to be obtained primarily
from evaluations, but this is not happening as sys- Sustainability
tematically as would be desirable. The objective was The organizational reform process has not com-
to simplify/streamline the administrative processes pletely succeeded in breaking down the internal
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
61
Results Based Management Training for the staff development of the results framework and performance
measurement plan for Strategic Plan held in Nairobi, Kenya 2012 © UN-Habitat/ Julius Mwelu
7. Crosscutting Issues
Residents of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa District in Pakistan have a boat ride to safer grounds after floods, 2010. UN-Habitat
facilitates reconstruction after natural and man-made disasters. © UN-Habitat
Fund and UN-Habitat are collaborating to initiate a by the various divisions, branches and units of
programme to improve access to sanitation and ba- UN-Habitat address gender equality and women’s
sic services in Antananarivo. Oxfam and UN-Habitat empowerment in human settlements development
have agreed to collaborate in a selected number of by incorporating gender impact assessment and
pilot cities in which both agencies have existing pro- gender disaggregated data criteria in the design,
grammes. implementation, monitoring and evaluation of the
activities”.
UN-Habitat actively participated in the Consolidated
Appeal Process and in the Central Emergency Re- Consequently, UN-Habitat has sought to integrate
sponse Fund (CERF), thus facilitating approval of and mainstream gender into core areas of its work.
funding for humanitarian projects in countries and The strategic and institutional arrangements for
regions prone to and recovering from human and this integration and mainstreaming include many
natural disasters. These countries include Afghan- actors: the Gender Mainstreaming Unit, a network
istan, Haiti, Iraq, Nepal, Pakistan, Somalia, Sri Lanka of Gender Focal Points, and a Gender Task Force.
and Sudan. In the Occupied Palestinian Territory, UN-Habitat counts on a network of Gender Focal
UN-Habitat participated in the revision of the re- Points, with staff members distributed throughout
construction Guidelines for the Reconstruction the divisions, regions, countries and programmes. A
and Rehabilitation of war affected housing in the number of them have high-level expertise in gender
Gaza Strip through the Gaza Shelter Reconstruction analysis and technical skills and the group is poten-
Working Group in the housing sector. UN-Habitat tially a powerful asset for delivering on the Agency’s
increasingly provides technical advice to Oxfam, UN- commitments to gender mainstreaming. A network
HCR and UNICEF on urban water supply, sanitation of Gender Focal Points, together with staff of the
and basic services programmes in urban areas; and Gender Management Unit, are members of the
to UNHCR on sanitation and solid waste. Agency’s Gender Task Force.
This has resulted in the decision to mainstream gen- nership with the Huairou Commission is highly stra-
der in branches instead of having a dedicated gen- tegic. This system of women’s networks provides
der unit. access for UN-Habitat to organizations that have a
wealth of knowledge on local contexts and access
UN-Habitat has achieved significant results in a
to informal groups and slum dwellers’ organizations
number of areas, including production of advocacy
that it would not be able to muster on its own.
materials, and evidence-based information on gen-
UN-Habitat supported the Huairou Commission
der and urbanization, support to women’s networks
developing a women’s online information portal
and partners as change agents; capacity-build-
(www.womenandhumansettlements.org) to facili-
ing in gender mainstreaming in local governance,
tate global exchange of information and learning on
and in strengthening gender mainstreaming in all
issues pertaining to women and human settlements.
UN-Habitat activities in Asia and the Pacific, Africa,
The portal was launched in 2010. The agency’s work
Arab States, and Latin America and the Caribbean.
to date on Safe Cities with United Nations Entity for
The First Gender Equality Action Assembly was held
Gender Equality and Empowerment of Women pro-
at the Fifth Session of the World Urban Forum in
vides a useful stepping-stone to increase engage-
2010, which: 1) enabled participants to assess prog-
ment with the new United Nations Women (UN
ress of the Gender Equality Action Plan; 2) led to re-
Women) entity. It can be concluded that the efforts
vision of the action plan; and 3) informed the prep-
of UN-Habitat in mainstreaming and promoting
aration of the next assembly to be held before the
gender equality and women’s empowerment across
Sixth Session of the World Urban Forum in 2012.
its programmes and policies has demonstrated posi-
UN-Habitat’s work on governance and security in tive results and is therefore certainly relevant.
cities has demonstrated an awareness of the prob-
UN-Habitat’s Partnership Strategy does not have
lems associated with gender-blindness with local
adequate provisions for guidance on partnership
government institutions, and its work on Safer Cit-
formation in the areas of gender mainstreaming and
ies has promoted a focus on greater gender sensi-
women’s empowerment. Criteria for partnership
tivity in planning practices. The Agency has taken
should include a willingness and ability to ‘adopt
considerable steps to promote women’s access to
mutual approaches to gender equality’ in line with
security of tenure and challenged gender inequali-
the Agency’s Policy and Strategy Paper for Focus
ties such as legislation on land and housing that is
Area 1. Findings at country level show that partners
discriminatory towards women. The report Gender
who are implementing the Agency’s programmes
Equality for Smarter Cities: Challenges and Progress
and projects will not necessarily be willing, nor able,
was published in 2010. It has been ranked as the
to ensure that their work is gender sensitive.
most read UN-Habitat publication on Scrib.com (a
popular social network for publishers). The GLTN
Challenges
has produced an innovative tool that can be used at
the grassroots level to assess the sensitivity of land The GEAP is wide-ranging and ambitious and efforts
policy in relation to gender equality. UN-Habitat’s to monitor its implementation still had to get off
work in access to water and sanitation provisions the ground. The Gender Management Unit cannot
has sought to engage stakeholders in local govern- implement the action plan alone, nor can it be held
ment and utility companies to raise awareness on solely responsible for overseeing an extremely de-
gender equality issues. To ensure climate change ad- tailed and ambitious plan. An immediate task was
aptation and mitigation methods are gender sensi- to revisit the gender equality activities in the MTSIP
tive, a checklist has been tested in two vulnerability and the action plan’s Focus Area Frameworks. The
assessments undertaken by UN-Habitat. establishment of a system of Gender Focal Points
is a strategic tool for promoting work on gender
In terms of agency-wide partnerships with organi- equality. However, the decentralized model based
zations of gender equality advocates, UN-Habitat’s on the Gender Management Unit and focal points is
institutionalized relationships with the Huairou still in need of being adequately developed.
Commission and with UNIFEM. The agency’s part-
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
65
UN-Habitat should ensure that findings from its • Align the action plan with the MTSIP monitor-
own research on gender equality are integrated ing process and collect sex-disaggregated data
into general guidance materials published by the for a selection of already existing indicators;
Agency. Its short policy brief on gender and disasters
• Programme design should integrate analysis of
explicitly sets out the need to pay particular atten-
the potential impact on gender equality and
tion to ensure women’s rights to land and property
include specific indicators of achievements;
in the aftermath of crises such as wars and natural
disasters. Work at country level should actively seek • The monitoring framework for gender equal-
to ensure that women’s rights to land are upheld ity and women’s empowerment should adopt
in post-conflict situations and in countries where a results-based monitoring and evaluation
women’s rights are systematically abused. approach;
• Partnership with UN Women should be actively
One of the challenges of the gender programme
pursued, particularly at country level.
is staffing inadequacy, which has delayed delivery
of some outputs. Human resource constraints also • The partnership base should be expanded be-
hinder collaboration with other United Nations joint yond grassroots networks.
programmes on gender equality and the empow-
The roles and responsibilities of Gender Manage-
erment of women. The appropriateness of its insti-
ment Unit, the Gender Focal Points and the Gender
tutional arrangements and strategic partnerships in
Task Force need to be re-defined. UN-Habitat should
the process requires continuous review, rationaliza-
prioritize substance and decide on which gender
tion and strengthening, for more optimal results.
equality results it wants to pursue before detailed
It is noted that, at present, GEAP depends on very
decisions are taken on the necessary staff strength
few donors (Norway and Sweden) for its continued
and competencies. The concept of a ‘nucleus model’
existence. Its efficiency and effectiveness can only
for dealing with inequalities more broadly was men-
improve with appropriate and adequate human and
tioned in the evaluation report. The rationale for
financial resource support.
such a model would be that UN-Habitat’s work on
human settlements touches on a variety of inequal-
Lessons learned ities defined by class/socio-economic status, age,
Some of the lessons learned were that the decen- race, ethnicity and faith, for which a common main-
tralized model of Gender Management Unit and streaming concept could be attempted. The work
Gender Focal Points has not been adequately devel- does not necessarily become easier by working with
oped; not all branches have undertaken high quality broader and different forms of inequalities. Gender
analysis and there is frequently a disconnection be- and social impact assessments still need to be done.
tween policy papers and operational work; and in
post-conflict work on land there is a need for active 7.3 Urban Youth
support for women’s land rights in accordance with
Young people constitute over 70 per cent of the
UN-Habitat’s policy.
urban population in many developing countries
and are disproportionately affected by major urban
Recommendations
problems (unemployment, crime, drug abuse and
Some of the independent gender mainstreaming insecurity). The Youth are both perpetrators and vic-
evaluation’s recommendations were: tims of these problems. The Habitat Agenda com-
mits UN-Habitat to work in partnership with young
• Choose priority goals for the Gender Equality
people in human settlements management and de-
Action Plan. Senior management, Focus Areas
velopment using participatory approaches.
teams and the Gender Task Force should ac-
tively collaborate with the GMU on implemen- Successive resolutions and decisions of the Govern-
tation; Select a limited number of indicators, ing Council and that of the United Nations General
linked to prioritized areas, for monitoring of the Assembly have called for adoption of crosscutting
action plan;
66 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
perspectives on issues and concerns related to A Special Fund, named the Opportunities Fund for
youth and gender in UN-Habitat programmes with Urban Youth-led Development, otherwise known as
a view to enhancing the development of youths and the Urban Youth Fund, was set up in 2008 with the
streamlining of gender and empowering women in goal of supporting youth-led initiatives and provid-
those development activities. These resolutions and ing support in the following areas:
decisions have also called for strategies to enhance
• Mobilizing young people to help strengthen
the full involvement of youth in their development.
youth-related policy formulation;
UN-Habitat has consequently incorporated Youth
Development and Empowerment in its Programmes • Building the capacities of governments, non-
and in the MTSIP. -governmental organizations, civil society orga-
nizations and private sector entities at all levels
The Youth 21 is a recent UN-Habitat initiative, which
to ensure a better response to the needs and
focuses on the engagement of youth in the UN sys-
issues of young people;
tem. Youth leaders and activists have shared their
experiences, and exchanged ideas and approaches • Supporting the development of interest-based
on youth-led development with their peers at the information and communication-oriented net-
‘Youth 21 Building for Change Stakeholder Meet- works;
ing & Global Youth Leadership Forum on Inclusive • Piloting and demonstrating new and innovative
Governance’ held in March 2012 in Nairobi. The approaches to employment, good governance,
result of this forum was a series of recommenda- adequate shelter and secure tenure;
tions for youth engagement at local, national and
• Sharing and exchanging information on best
international level, named the Nairobi Declaration.
practices;
The Nairobi Declaration is the starting point for the
wider discussion on establishing a United Nations • Facilitating vocational training and credit mech-
Permanent Forum on Youth. This is due to the im- anisms, in collaboration with the private sector
portance UN-Habitat attaches to the need for a and in cooperation with other United Nations
United Nations-wide policy pertaining to increased bodies and stakeholders, to promote entrepre-
youth engagement in the United Nations system. neurship and employment for young people;
A group of young people participating in a UN-Habitat Youth funded project to promote youth particaption in the
construction of public policies for youth in Brazil, 2012 © UN-Habitat
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
67
• Promoting gender mainstreaming in all activities laam, Kampala and Nairobi) and assist young peo-
involving urban youth. ple in improving their own lives (about 6,000 youths
have undergone training at these Centres); ‘We are
The Urban Youth Fund targeted non-profit organi-
the Future’ Centres in post-conflict countries in Ad-
zations led by young people in Africa, Asia and the
dis Ababa, (Ethiopia), Freetown (Sierra Leone) and
Pacific and Latin America and the Caribbean. It is
Kigali, (Rwanda) to support affected children and
financed by the Government of Norway, which allo-
youth and provide intergenerational programming
cated USD 2 million for a pilot phase (2009–2011),
in life skills (community health, agriculture, nutri-
to be renewed for 2012–2013. The UN-Habitat
tion, arts, sports, and information technology). The
Youth Empowerment Programme aims to foster
Moon Bean Youth Training Centre was also estab-
youth empowerment for meaningful solutions to
lished in Kibera, Nairobi, to train young people in
urban challenges. The programme supports efforts
construction work, business development, and in-
to:
formation and communications technology. Several
• Improve the livelihoods of marginalized youth in other programmes were developed to support the
urban slums; development and gainful engagement of youth.
• Encourage local governments and other institu- The Youth Development agenda has been main-
tions to engage youth in policy formulation and streamed into several branches and programmes
programme implementation; of UN-Habitat, including in the Urban Environment
• Increase understanding of the role of youth in Planning Branch, Water, Sanitation and Infrastruc-
sustainable urbanization through information, ture Branch, and in the Safer Cities Programme.
communication and learning; The Programme has also produced and published a
number of reports, including State of Urban Youth
• Identify urban challenges and solutions by en-
Report 2010/2011: Leveling the Playing Field, which
couraging youth participation in local, national
presents important issues concerning young peo-
and global level forums; and
ple residing in urban settlements. This report has
• Scale up and sustain youth orientated ap- been widely distributed and is also available online.
proaches by ensuring broad based multi-stake- The programme has also produced information
holder engagement in the youth strategy. and training manuals, such as, Asset Mapping Pro-
gramme Manual for Urban Youth Centres, Entre-
Activities in pursuance of Focus Area 1 and the
preneurship Programming for Urban Youth Centres;
ENOF were implemented through the Youth Em-
Program Planning and Evaluation in Urban Youth
powerment Programme. Activities were carried
Centres. The information and training manuals pro-
out within the context of the 2010/2011 biennial
vide opportunities to raising awareness of youth
work programme related to both the normative
issues across the world. Youth development issues
and operational dimensions. Support was provided
are also strongly represented in UN-Habitat’s latest
in conjunction with partners, particularly local gov-
State of the World’s Cities 2010/2011 – Cities for
ernment entities and youth groups/youth serving
All: Bridging the Urban Divide. The flagship Global
organizations. Relationships with other United Na-
Report on Human Settlements2011: Cities and Cli-
tions agencies are being strengthened through the
mate Change has also integrated youth issues.
UNDAF and One United Nations framework.
UN-Habitat continues to affirm its role as a leading
Several activities and programmes were developed
agency in bringing the urban youth to the global
and implemented to advance Youth development
agenda, highlighting its contribution to sustainable
and empowerment. These included: the setting up
urban development through such mechanisms as
of the Youth Advisory Board to ensure integration
the ‘African Urban Youth Assembly: Youth and Pros-
of youth concerns in the activities of UN-Habitat; es-
perity’ of cities held in Abuja, Nigeria in July 2011.
tablishment of several facilities to cater for the needs
The event attracted senior government officials,
of youths, including One Stop Centres (in Dar es Sa-
NGOs, local authority representatives and over 300
68 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
youth from 23 African countries. The youth shared adopted a youth resolution (resolution 23/7), which
lessons and best practices from youth initiatives and recognized UN-Habitat’s role as a leader in youth en-
government policies promoting youth employment gagement in the UN system.
and youth participation in a number of areas re-
lated to urban economy, environment and equity. Conclusions
UN-Habitat has developed evidence-based products
In view of the limited funding at the disposal of
substantiating the centrality of youth, such as the
UN-Habitat, the use of partners remains a viable op-
State of Urban Youth 2010-2011: Leveling the Play-
tion. The positive impact of partnerships will be the
ing Field on equalities of youth development issues.
greatest when normative and operational activities
The report provides recommendations on policy
are carefully integrated. Operational work must be
direction. The global helpdesk is an interactive on-
in the form of pilots so that they can form the basis
line portal for those interested in UN-Habitat’s work
for lessons learned about promising practices and
with urban youth.
act as a catalyst with strategic partners who can
UN-Habitat continues to strengthen engagement bring additional resources on board.
of urban youth in developing effective strategies
Through various pilot activities, UN-Habitat has
for addressing issues that affect them. The use of
demonstrated its potential to change urban devel-
professional youth artists has contributed to rais-
opment by supporting and training young people
ing the profile of the urban youth agenda within
to take charge of programmes that are relevant to
UN-Habitat and the international community as
them. Many partners have been enlisted to help
indicated through the various initiatives. Through
accelerate the project operations. Nevertheless, op-
the ‘Messengers of Truth’ Initiative, UN-Habitat has
erational challenges continue to plague youth ini-
worked closely with some of the world’s leading
tiatives: these include delays in the disbursement
popular artists and musicians to raise awareness on
of funds; the inadequacy of new funding to ensure
matters ranging from women’s rights to urban slum
sustainability; some confusion as to the extent to
conditions.
which young people themselves should be respon-
In addition to the core funding of the pro- sible for programme decision-making; and inade-
gramme provided by the Government of Norway, quate staffing.
UN-Habitat has, in partnership with the same Gov-
Youth programmes have attracted considerable in-
ernment, launched a USD 100,000 Zanzibar Fund-
terest. The Urban Youth Fund has attracted exten-
ing Window of the Urban Youth in 2011. Over 70
sive interest from UN agencies, international and
young people attended this event from youth orga-
national institutions and other youth programmes.
nizations in Zanzibar. Since the launch in early 2011,
The volume of applications to the Fund and the
awareness workshops on the programme have been
media interest that it has generated indicate a rap-
held in and around Zanzibar and over 2,000 young
idly growing demand for the models developed by
men and women have attended.
UN-Habitat. Each individual model, however,
An independent Evaluation of the UN-Habitat Youth presents challenges that ought to be explored and
Programme & Urban Youth Fund was conducted incorporated into lessons learned as a way to en-
between October 2010 and February 201133. The courage more participation of young people.
evaluation focused on: a) the overall relevance of
Implementation of youth programmes, which is
UN-Habitat work with youth; b) integration of youth
largely decentralized, should involve consultations
issues into the normative and operational work
among the partners and the Youth Branch, the
of UN-Habitat; c) operations of the Urban Youth
relevant UN-Habitat entities and other players on:
Fund; and d) the normative and operational per-
improvement of implementation, documentation of
formance of the youth empowerment initiatives of
knowledge on best practices and emerging issues,
UN-Habitat. The evaluation gave recommendations
and a youth-friendly strategy for the dissemination
for further improvement of the programme. At its
of lessons learned to support advocacy and capacity
23rd session, in April 2011, the Governing Council
development.
33 UN-Habitat, 2011, Evaluation of the UN-Habitat Youth
Programme & Urban Youth Fund, Evaluation Report 2/2011.
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
69
The Youth Programme of UN-Habitat is considered can serve as the solution to all urban youth
relevant. It has invested much effort and made sig- problems;
nificant progress in engagement with urban youth.
• UN-Habitat has been instrumental in linking
It has made a notable contribution to highlighting
young people with other actors involved in
the needs of young people in the urban setting and
urban issues, such as municipalities and the
identifying issues that need be addressed.
private sector. Support from the private sector
and various foundations have been instrumental
Main Challenges of the Youth Programme to increasing the visibility of UN-Habitat and its
Despite intensive work from the UN-Habitat Secre- youth activities.
tariat, mobilizing additional resources to the Urban
Youth Programme has been very challenging. The Recommendations from the independent
operation of the Urban Youth Programme is almost youth evaluation
totally dependent on funding from the Government The recommendations are summarized as follows:
of Norway. Generating greater understanding and
political will to attract a bigger donor base for the • UN-Habitat should build the capacity of its
Urban Youth Programme has been extremely dif- youth programme by: broadening the diversity
ficult. The limited administrative and financial re- of its core funding; developing strategic part-
sources therefore inhibit in-depth monitoring of nerships, such as with the ILO and UNICEF;
some of the projects sponsored by the programme. increasing staff to ensure that skills match
programme goals; increase the involvement
of young people, youth leaders, UN-Habitat
Lessons learned
regional and country offices.
The lessons learned are summarized as follows:
• UN-Habitat should review its Youth Programme
• It is crucial that decision-making in youth cent- strategy within an agreed upon organiza-
res should involve young people themselves. It is tion-wide framework for mainstreaming youth
also essential to define the appropriate and dis- issues;
tinct roles to be taken by adults as a means of
• UN-Habitat and its partners should review the
clarifying what exactly is meant by the concept
governance structure of youth programmes to
of ‘substantive youth engagement’;
align the priorities in national policies;
• The concept of a laboratory is a useful meta-
• UN-Habitat should strengthen the implemen-
phor for the work of the youth programmes
tation of the Urban Youth Fund by limiting the
in the sense that the programmes need to be
selection of future awards to countries where
put into practice in order to test what actually
UN-Habitat already has a strong presence; and
works;
ensuring that funding is awarded to projects
• Most youth activities have been undertaken that fall within existing Focus Areas, or in which
on an ad hoc basis, both in terms of financing there is a specific donor interest;
and staff. Employing staff that have particular
• UN-Habitat should strengthen its monitoring,
expertise in youth issues is sensible and would
evaluation and reporting strategy to enhance
encourage the mainstreaming of youth issues
its handling of future youth projects and pro-
into particular programmatic areas.
grammes.
• UN-Habitat uses various programmes to inte-
grate youth empowerment into its work. To a
certain extent the models used offer a unique
opportunity to deal with youth issues in differ-
ent contexts. While each model does have some
lessons to offer, it is clear that no single model
70 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
8. Organizational Transition
The Governing Council requested the Executive Di- The main characteristics of the new organizational
rector, at it twenty-first session in April 2007, (reso- structure are: i) a horizontal flatter matrix organiza-
lution 21/2 paragraph 10) “…to give immediate pri- tion; ii) a project-based organization, which brings
ority to the proposed institutional reforms, including together the normative and operational work un-
the further implementation of the of results-based der each project; iii) a flexible organization working
management, robust knowledge management, through flex teams; iv) an organization with clear
and any institutional adjustments necessary to bet- delegation of authority down to the project level;
ter align the organization with the MTSIP, consis- and v) existing field projects and normative policy
tent with the wider process of United Nation sys- work managed through a project-based account-
tem-wide reform”. As evident from the foregoing, ability approach. The new proposed organizational
UN-Habitat’s organizational set-up during the first structure consists of seven thematic branches, as
four years of MTSIP was not optimal. The goal of the outlined in Table 8.1.
ongoing restructuring is to fully align the organiza-
The branches are considered as ‘virtual’ as they will
tion with the Strategic Plan 2014-2019.
consist of staff located in both regional offices and
The 2010 Peer Review recommendations on orga- Headquarters thus breaking down the divide be-
nizational restructuring were followed-up with an tween normative and operational work. In the new
organizational review process, which was formally proposed structure – as elaborated in June 2012 –
launched in February 201134. In February 2011, an policy, management and administration will be dealt
Internal Review Team was established to launch within four offices:
and guide the review process. An external change
Office of Executive Director: Strategic Planning,
management consultant and a senior staff member
Legal Unit, Regional Offices, Scientific Advisory,
from the United Nations Secretariat’s Department of
Governing Council Secretariat, Liaison Offices and
Management facilitated the consultative process as
the Evaluation Unit;
part of the broader United Nations institutional re-
form. The review process entailed a series of work- • Management Office: Quality Assurance,
shops, interviews, and consultations with staff and Finance, Finance and Budget, Office Man-
partners. The results of the organizational review, agement, ICT Support, and Knowledge Man-
which were submitted in July 2011, also contained agement Support, Human Resources Liaison,
recommendations for improving UN-Habitat’s orga- Headquarters’ Project Administrators, and Field
nizational structure. Project Administrators;
This process led to a restructuring of UN-Habitat’s • Project Office: Project Implementation and
organization that took effect from January 2012. Monitoring, Portfolio Strategy; and
The third and last biennial work programme 2012- • E
xternal Relations Office: consist of two
2013 of the MTSIP will be implemented within the branches 1) Partner and Inter-Agency Branch;
new structure. The aim of the new structure is to and 2) Advocacy, Outreach and Communica-
ensure a more effective and efficient delivery of tions Branch: Production Unit, Outreach and
UN-Habitat’s mandate at the country, regional and Events, Press and Media, Editorial Unit, World
global levels. Urban Forum, and World Urban Campaign.
The Project Office is responsible for the overall coor- UN-Habitat’s new organizational structure and thus
dination of UN-Habitat’s project portfolio attending constitutes the framework for the branches’ and
to the following functions: their units’ work and budget. It is expected that the
organizational transition will be concluded by June
• Project identification
2012. The restructuring of UN-Habitat will, however,
• Project formulation pose some challenges in relation to the implemen-
tation of MTSIP as regards to coordination among
• Project implementation and coordination
the newly established units and performance and
• Resource mobilization progress monitoring of ongoing programmes.
• Portfolio information management
During the interviews, it became evident that the
• Portfolio monitoring/knowledge management perceptions among the staff on the organizational
transition to the new set-up were very diverse.
UN-Habitat’s work will continue to be guided by the
Some saw the organizational changes as imperative
MTSIP until the end of 2013. A matrix has been de-
for UN-Habitat to be able to better deliver, while
veloped that shows how the 2012-2013 work pro-
others saw the changes as constraining their work.
gramme’s sub-expected accomplishments relate to
72 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
Child outside an IDP camp in the outskirts of Goma, DRC where UN-Habitat/GLTN is implementing a land programme
on conflict mediation, 2012. © UN-Habitat
74 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
SWOT analysis for the Strategic Plan of UN-Habitat to conceive innovative solutions
2014-2019 and the potential for catalytic effects; impor-
tance of slum upgrading, as well as drinking
The Executive Director and Division Directors con-
water and sanitation; and preparation for the
ducted a ‘Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and
Third United Nations Conference on Housing
Threats’ (SWOT) analysis of UN-Habitat’s prospects.
and Sustainable Urban Development (Habitat III)
The results of the analysis and the deliberations of
to be held in 2016.
the CPR Open-ended Contact Group have informed
the implementation of the Strategic Plan. Some of • Threats: The main threats facing UN-Habitat are
the key points are presented below: mostly from the external environment. These
include declining donor contributions to non-
• Strengths: Very good achievements have been
-earmarked revenues in recent years, partly due
attained in post-conflict and post-disaster
to the current global economic crisis, possible
countries; innovative water and sanitation
divergence between UN-Habitat’s official work
approaches have been promoted; land man-
programme and donor interests – as reflected
agement (GLTN) has been strongly supported
in the increasing earmarked revenues from do-
by donors; advancements have been made on
nors, rising interest in the urban agenda among
urban safety and security and forced evictions;
other multilateral agencies having the potential
gender and youth have been mainstreamed
risk of duplication of efforts, and inability to
in many interventions; global advocacy has
respond in a timely manner to the demands for
increased the awareness on urban issues; and
its services.
regional ministerial platforms on housing and
urban development are active in Africa, Asia Guiding principles of the Strategic Plan
and the Pacific, and Latin America and the 2014-2019
Caribbean.
The Strategic Plan’s Focus Areas are also the sub-
• Weaknesses: There is a need for: 1) more effec- -programmes in the 2014-2015 biennial strategic
tive management systems and reduced bureau- framework, work programme and budget, thus en-
cratic load and better use of human resources; suring complete alignment among the three docu-
2) improved core productivity at Headquarters ments. The Strategic Plan contains a results frame-
and delivery efficiency in the initial phases of work, which is prepared at the very beginning – thus
field projects, especially emergencies; improved ensuring that the reporting on the six-year Strategic
effectiveness at the country level, where most Plan and the biennial work programme are unified
donor funding has shifted; 3) improved fund- into a single process. The Strategic Plan will be im-
ing predictability and resource mobilization; 4) plemented in line with the need for closer cooper-
improved internal strategic planning in order ation and coordination with other United Nations
to enhance policy and programme implemen- bodies/agencies and with a view to avoiding over-
tation coherence; 5) systematic harvesting of lapping and duplicating programmes and activities.
core knowledge and lessons learned; and 6)
improved external communication.
The Strategic Plan’s Part II: Strategic
• Opportunities: Increasing global importance of Choice
the urban agenda and recognition of the lead-
UN-Habitat’s work, which is both normative and
ing role of cities in national economic growth;
operational, seeks to assist local, regional and na-
global movement to revive urban planning and
tional authorities that are responsible for urban and
increased demand for assistance in planning
human settlement issues, to improve the standard
for small and medium sized urban settlements
of living of their citizens through policies that are
of less than one million people in developing
in conformity with the guiding principles of sustain-
countries; increasing global importance of cities
able urban development and subsidiarity. The main
in addressing climate change and energy effi-
features of the Strategic Plan are presented in Box
ciency; the normative and operational mandate
9.1.
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
75
Table 9.1: Focus Areas of the Strategic Plan 2014-2019 and MTSIP 2008-2013
Focus Areas Strategic Plan 2014-2019 Focus Areas MTSIP 2008-2013
2. Urban Land, Legislation and Governance 2. Urban planning, management, and governance
4. Urban Basic Services 4. Environmentally sound basic urban infrastructure and services
Table 9.2: Strategic Plan 2014-2019 – Focus Areas and strategic results
Focus Area Strategic Result
1. Urban Legislation, Land and City, regional and national authorities have established systems for improved access to
Governance land, adopted enabling legislation, and put in place effective decentralized governance
that fosters equitable sustainable urban development.
2. Urban Planning and Design City, regional and national authorities have implemented policies, plans and designs for
more compact, better integrated and connected cities that foster equitable sustainable
urban development and are resilient to climate change.
3. Urban Economy City, regional and national authorities have improved capacity to implement urban
policies supportive of local economic development, creation of decent jobs and
enhanced municipal finance.
4. Urban Basic Services City, regional and national authorities have implemented policies for increasing
equitable access to basic urban services for improving the standard of living of the
urban poor.
5. Housing and Slum City, regional and national authorities have implemented policies for increasing access
Upgrading to adequate housing and improving the standard of living in existing slums.
6. Risk Reduction and Cities have increased their resilience to the impacts of natural and human-made
Rehabilitation crises in an equitable manner, and undertaken rehabilitation in ways that advance
sustainable urban development.
7. Research and Capacity Knowledge of sustainable urbanization issues disseminated and capacity enhanced
Building at international, national and local levels in order to improve formulation and
implementation of evidence based policies and programmes, and to improve public
awareness of the benefits and conditions necessary for sustainable urbanization.
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
77
Part 3:
Conclusions,
Lessons Learned and
Recommendations
78 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
The evaluation team’s conclusions are related to analysing data and reporting on achievements. The
three time periods: the 2008-2011 MTSIP period; cause for these problems should be addressed so
the 2012-2013 MTSIP period; and the Strategic Plan that the negative effects are eliminated in the fu-
period 2014-2019. The conclusions will relate to the ture.
evaluation’s specific objectives and the ten evalua-
tion questions. Relevance
National and local stakeholders appreciate
10.1 The 2008-2011 MTSIP Period UN-Habitat’s support for sustainable urbanization.
This is demonstrated by the fact that UN-Habitat has
Meta conclusion
contributed to the formulation of national urban
The opinion of many stakeholders is that the MTSIP policies, strategies, and development plans at both
has been very positive to UN-Habitat. It has better national and local levels. However, it was found that
rationalized and further sharpened the program- the concept of ‘sustainable urbanization’ needs to
matic focus of UN-Habitat from what it was before, be more clearly defined and guiding principles need
brought about the better alignment of programmes, to be developed. There has been a significant in-
and played a catalytic role in encouraging and en- crease in UN-Habitat’s support to disaster-stricken
abling more productive partnerships than hitherto, and post conflict countries, which today constitutes
which in turn have helped in leveraging increased a very large part of UN-Habitat’s project portfolio.
funding for the Agency’s programmes. The relevance and catalytic effects of UN-Habitat’s
support increases when it is directed towards the
Even critics agree that, on the whole, the MTSIP
needs, as identified by national and local stakehold-
has charted a more focused and credible direction
ers (including Habitat partners), and when the sup-
for UN-Habitat’s programmes. It has brought about
port is an integral part of the UNDAF or Delivering
better integration and realignment of activities
as One process and is well coordinated with other
within programme countries – the insistence on re-
development partners. The main thrust on donor
sults-based management has been a positive contri-
coordination was with other United Nations agen-
bution. Overall, as a result of the MTSIP, UN-Habitat
cies. A further emphasis on donor coordination with
Programmes, while not yet perfect have attained a
a wider spectrum of stakeholders and greater pro-
significantly higher degree of focus, coherence and
motion of sector-wide approach would significantly
alignment than before the MTSIP was instituted.
enhance UN-Habitat’s normative role.
Medium-term strategic planning is therefore seen
an important mechanism for obtaining results that The UN-Habitat management still considers the
makes a positive difference. MTSIP strategic and institutional objectives to be
valid. The fundamental strategies and principles –
The MTSIP’s expected accomplishments have been
on which MTSIP are based – are still considered rele-
partially achieved during the four years of imple-
vant. With the exception of Focus Area 5 – although
mentation. Many – but not all – of the accomplish-
the intent is appreciated – the expected accomplish-
ments will be fully achieved by the end of 2013. The
ments and sub-expected accomplishments and as-
MTSIP Results Framework has been well conceived,
sociated activities of MTSIP are consistent with the
but the implementation has encountered a number
overall goal and with the intended impacts. With the
of problems including difficulties in collecting and
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
79
hindsight of four years of experience, the strategic between Headquarters and regional/country offices.
framework could have been formulated differently,
Resources inadequacy – financial and human – has
as is now the case with the proposed Strategic Plan
been a major weak link in the chain of the Agen-
2014-2019. However, the fundamental elements of
cy’s programme development and implementation.
the strategic plan remain, to a large extent, identical
Limited resource allocations from the United Nations
to that of the MTSIP and thus represent a continua-
Regular Budget and a small base of donor support,
tion of MTSIP – sharing identical overall goals.
with largely earmarked funding, limits the scope of
what the organization can prioritize. According to
Effectiveness
the Annual Progress Report on the Implementation
The MTSIP long-term development objectives are of the Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan
only loosely formulated and thus difficult to predict (January-December 2011), the Focus Areas’ utiliza-
their realization. The outcomes are not immediately tion rates varied from 64 to 80 per cent (expendi-
apparent from the reported indicators. A large part ture/allotment) for Financial Year 2011.
of the MTSIP targets have been partially achieved
and are likely to be fully achieved. As had been The MTSIP planning process has not been optimal.
noted in the peer review of the MTSIP, there has The conceptualization of MTSIP Results Framework,
been an over-concentration and too much reliance and Focus Areas’ policy and strategy papers were
on numerical indicators as measures of achievement, delayed. The ENOF did not quite provide the clar-
even for roles and activities for which other types of ity it was intended to do. Baseline surveys were not
indicators, albeit qualitative ones, could have been conducted, which would otherwise have guided
more appropriate. Besides, some of these numerical the choice of indicators and how they could best
indicators tended to stretch credibility. Programme be measured – one reason being that adequate
and thematic evaluations/reviews have provided a resources to generate the baseline data were not
more in-depth analysis of MTSIP’s implementation allocated. The ENOF element to support govern-
performance than the progress reports, but eval- ments and their development partners to achieve
uations/reviews are limited in number and do not more sustainable urbanization has improved coordi-
present an overall assessment of UN-Habitat’s work. nation in UN-Habitat’s programme implementation
and management by narrowing, if not bridging, the
Efficiency inter-divisional divide between the normative and
operational programme activities. But much more
Despite financial and human resources constraints, needs to be done in this area. The component of
significant progress had been made in the imple- normative elements in country level projects appears
mentation of most of the MTSIP Focus Areas. Of well balanced with that of the operational elements.
special note is the progress made in the implemen-
tation of Focus Areas 1, 2, 4 and 6. The expected Parallel reporting for the MTSIP and for the regular
accomplishments for Focus Area 6 appeared very biennial work programme, and reporting demands
ambitious compared to the actual staffing and re- of the different donors, placed a heavy burden on
sources allocated. Increased delivery and the over- the limited staff. It is welcoming, however, to note
all programme volume put additional pressure on that the MTSIP and the biennial work programme
staff. Overall, human and financial resources were and budget have become completely aligned and
adequate, but time taken to utilize resources ap- congruent as of the 2012-2013 biennium and do-
propriately delayed progress. The issue has been nors have agreed to one harmonized MTSIP six
raised about staff shortages and high staff turnover monthly and annual progress report. Although the
in several programme areas, which have negatively progress reports are quite extensive, they are not
affected the full implementation of some of the able to capture country level achievements in any
Focus Area programmes and had disrupted work- great detail.
ing patterns. There appears to be an apparent and
substantial imbalance in human resource allocation
80 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
UN-Habitat’s full participation in the UNDAF and Headquarters without inputs from the regional and
Delivering as One processes was hampered by the country levels and then dumped on them as a fait
Agency’s low visibility among other United Nations accompli. The result is that these programmes miss
agencies with respect to what it is capable of contrib- out on the accumulated wisdom, knowledge and
uting to countries’ development programmes, con- experiences of the regional and country offices,
sidering UN-Habitat’s lack of substantial resources to which makes implementation of some of these pro-
invest in a given country’s development programme. grammes difficult or inoperable at country level.
However, in those countries where UN-Habitat suc-
ceeded in a meaningful participation in the UNDAF Impact
process, more funding for UN-Habitat was accessed
MTSIP has already, at this stage, had an impact on
and synergies enhanced, which also resulted in in-
the countries’ policies, strategies, and capacity de-
creased visibility and voice of UN-Habitat.
velopments. In some countries, the urban devel-
There is expressed need for more guidance from opment challenges have been incorporated in na-
the Headquarters to the regional and country of- tional development plans, which normally would
fice levels to ensure consistency and congruence of trigger allocation of human and financial resources
the Agency’s programmes. Correspondingly there accordingly. Normative outcomes are likely to ma-
is a need for efficient feedback mechanisms from terialize further during MTSIP’s next two years. Cur-
the countries and regions to the Headquarters to rently, limited information is available on likely me-
raise Headquarters’ awareness of the country level dium-term outcomes and impacts related to urban
dynamics and how this should influence the future social, economic, and physical achievements – in-
normative and operational work. This suggests that tended as well as non-intended. Outcomes and im-
there is need for better and more efficient informa- pacts will undoubtedly materialize in years to come.
tion flows. Regional offices handle the accounting The scale of outcomes and impact at the global level
for projects, field offices and field staff, which rep- depends on the amount of funding that can be mo-
resents a substantial workload, but no common bilized. The order of magnitude of the impacts of
operational manuals and guidelines exist, which UN-Habitat’s investments is limited in terms of cov-
could streamline and facilitate this work. UNDP, for erage required to achieve the MDGs. More detailed
example, has such manuals and guidelines. reviews/evaluations at the country level would cer-
tainly disclose attributions and contributions to the
The Habitat Programme Managers and the prepara- catalytic effects on policy changes, reforms, and
tion of Habitat Country Programme Documents have strategic approaches, which in all probability will
enhanced UN-Habitat’s role in the UNDAF process have long-term impacts.
(as well as the Delivering as One process) in some
countries. Without adequate resources to back up Recipient countries perceive UN-Habitat’s support
and advance the Habitat Country Programme Doc- for slum prevention and upgrading as contributing
uments, the Agency’s participation and representa- positively to improving the slum dwellers’ situa-
tion in the UNDAF process will have limited impact. tion in the longer-term through pro-poor housing
However, even with limited resources some Habitat policies, housing financing, and security of ten-
Programme Managers have succeeded in generat- ure – short-term improvements at scale will re-
ing relevant projects and attracting earmarked do- quire substantial capital injections to have a wider
nor funding for their implementation. As has been impact. The MTSIP Action Plan’s third phase – the
seen in the revenue trends, donors appear keener on scaling up phase – suggests that the volume of
providing earmarked funding than non-earmarked. UN-Habitat’s support should have increased sig-
nificantly. In terms of increase in monetary volume
The point was made by staff at the regional and there is only a 10 per cent increase in the 2012-
country offices that they are generally hardly con- 2013 budget compared to the 2010-2011 budget.
sulted or involved during the process of initiation, Some of the support may be scaled up without the
formulation and development of new global pro- involvement of UN-Habitat, but such catalytic ef-
grammes. Rather, such programmes are often fects do not seem to be well captured.
initiated, formulated, developed and adopted at
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
81
The coherence between the biennial work pro- The organizational restructuring has focused much
grammes and the MTSIP existed in terms of sub- on the Headquarters and less on the regional and
stance, but in terms of implementation the biennial country offices. It seems that the restructuring has
82 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
not taken adequate note of the changing reality that policy and strategy aspects across the Focus
with programmes and projects being increasingly Areas are coherently addressed. The concept of
conceptualized and funded through earmarked a ‘nucleus model’ for a common mainstreaming
funding at the country level. The issue of allocat- concept dealing with rights and inequalities
ing more resources to regional and country offices more broadly as defined by class/socio-eco-
and having a leaner organization at Headquarters nomic status, gender, age, race, ethnicity and
have not yet been presented or addressed. Habitat faith could be considered – and thus avoid
Programme Managers have proved to be a valuable having focal points and teams for each of the
asset in countries with a large project volume or inequalities.
having a significant potential for UN-Habitat inter-
• There is a need to distinguish between adminis-
ventions – both in terms of generating new projects
trative/budgetary quality assurance and profes-
and mobilizing funding. The roles and functions of
sional quality assurance. This raises the question
Regional Directors and Habitat Programme Man-
of clarity as regards to the responsibility for
agers need to be reviewed as part of the organiza-
professional quality assurance.
tional restructuring. It is not enough just to change
the organizational structure, but also the mind-set There is a great need to review the report prepara-
of senior staff to make the organizational change a tion procedures with the aim of producing reports
success. UN-Habitat advises governments to apply of good quality, minimizing resource requirement,
the subsidiarity principle – that could equally well and capturing of lessons learned and good prac-
be applied to UN-Habitat’s own organization. There tices. The normative and operational lessons learned
is no doubt that there will be a need for effective at regional and country levels represent a valuable
support from Headquarters for facilitating and at- source of information that can feed into the flag-
tending to global issues. A scrutiny of the new or- ship reports and to some extent into the progress
ganizational structure discloses some aspects that reports. The lessons learned at country level will
need further clarification: contribute to UN-Habitat’s normative dimension –
ensuring that this is based on concrete and tested
• The policy aspects are not reflected. Overall practices. The country level reporting is essential and
policy considerations will be essential to guide needs to be shaped so that it sustains the Agency’s
the further evolution of UN-Habitat and its conceptual aspects.
programmes.
• Environmental management has not been 10.3 The Strategic Plan 2014-2019
reflected. Even though environment is a cross-
The conceptualization of the Strategic Plan 2014-
cutting issue when formulating programmes
2019 has resulted in a more distinct framework for
and projects, it is also an important discipline
the Focus Areas. Even though the structure and
by itself in connection with urban planning and
scope of the Strategic Plan differ from the MTSIP,
management.
the new Focus Areas drew substantially from the
• The broader aspects of disaster management, MTSIP Focus Areas. The strategic plan could be char-
as opposed to risk reduction, have not been acterized as a second-generation plan, which has
adequately reflected. The scale of rectified or will rectify the problems encountered
UN-Habitat’s engagement in disaster stricken with the MTSIP, and also confirms the continued rel-
countries would warrant increased attention to evance of the MTSIP’s Focus Areas. The challenges
this discipline – and not only as a crosscutting remains to embark on a detailed preparation that
issue. should include Focus Area policy and strategy pa-
pers, a more elaborate ENOF, ‘SMART’ indicators
• Except for the Youth Unit, the crosscutting
for the expected accomplishments, baseline studies,
issues do not seem to be reflected. Although
etc. The Strategic Plan 2014-2019 corresponds well
crosscutting issues will be mainstreamed into
to what the UN-Habitat country teams consider as
the Focus Areas’ programmes, it is important
priorities. The survey [conducted by the evaluation
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
83
team] pointed to a pro-poor approach and priori- of UN-Habitat funds would in all probability favour
tized urban environment. the fragile and poorer countries. However, about 70
per cent of the world’s poor live in middle-income
The Strategic Plan 2014-2019 – as it currently ap-
countries, and thus there will also be a need to ad-
pears – has been formulated in a neutral fashion,
dress urbanization in these countries – possibly with
meaning that it could be applied to any country.
an increased emphasis on normative interventions.
While this is a positive feature, the strategic plan
Another aspect that will need to be addressed is the
needs to be complemented with strategies on how
overall issue of urbanization and how to address the
to cope with different categories of countries, for
various types of cities: mega, primary, secondary,
example fragile states, disaster stricken countries,
and tertiary cities.
post-conflict countries, and least developed coun-
tries, low-income and middle-income countries. The The new management set-up emphasizes the pro-
engagement of Habitat Programme Managers and ject-based approach. While this may be an effective
mobilization of national urban forums should be in- way of managing UN-Habitat’s interventions and
corporated in such strategic considerations. There is ensure the necessary budgetary discipline, the focus
currently a large representation of post-conflict and on a project-based approach may be at the expense
disaster reduction projects in the current portfolio, of the programmatic approach. Most development
which suggests that such projects in future could agencies have for several years promoted the pro-
also be an essential part of UN-Habitat’s support. grammatic approach, which include diversified in-
terventions, for example policy-making, institutional
While normative interventions are warranted in all
development, and capacity building. Many devel-
categories of countries (which would be formu-
opment partners have adopted the sector-wide ap-
lated in accordance with the country context), the
proach and the principles of the Paris Declaration on
operational interventions could be differentiated
Aid Effectiveness.
according to needs – implying that the allocation
84 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
The evaluation team has deduced the following les- and accomplishments at country level represent
sons learned, which are considered important for a wealth of knowledge, which is essential for
both the MTSIP 2012-2013 biennial period and the flagship reports and provides UN-Habitat with
Strategic Plan 2014-2019: a comparative advantage in relation to research
institutes and universities in capturing the urban
1. It is essential that the concept of sustainable cit-
dynamics. Drawing on the country level experi-
ies be well defined – and yet flexible to capture
ence, as attained by UN-Habitat country teams
current and future urban development trends –
and National Urban Forums, will increase the
so that it will constitute the overall policy and
relevance and effectiveness of the future World
strategic framework for the Focus Areas’ policy
Urban Forum sessions and the World Urban
and strategic papers and ENOF36. It was found
Campaign.
that the MTSIP policy and strategy papers would
have benefited from an overall policy that would 4. One of the reasons that implementation of the
have established a common framework. various focus areas of the MTSIP could not be
optimal was that there was not adequate time
2. UN-Habitat support becomes more effective
to prepare for its implementation after it was
when it is based on the policies and needs of the
formulated and adopted. A better planned re-
countries in which UN-Habitat are engaged, con-
view mechanism of the MTSIP implementation
sistent with the sustainable cities concept and
from the outset might have assisted in correct-
adherence to UNDAF/Delivering as One. A large
ing some of the observed constraints earlier on,
part of UN-Habitat’s project portfolio is gener-
which might have further facilitated the breaking
ated in regions and countries, where funding
down of the cooperation and communication
is mobilized, which would warrant a more pro-
barriers between the various UN-Habitat entities.
active engagement at country level. The presence
It was only after two years into the implemen-
of Habitat Programme Managers in countries
tation of MTSIP that it was realized that exten-
where there is substantial scope for UN-Habitat
sive organizational changes would be required.
support makes a difference in terms of quality
The implementation of MTSIP has demonstrated
and volume of support. It was found that the
that the implementation of a comprehensive
degree of success of Headquarters programmes
plan would have benefitted from organizational
and projects is substantially reduced if the for-
amendments from the outset, to be compatible
mulation does not draw on the knowledge and
with implementation requirements. The conduct
experience of the UN-Habitat regional and coun-
of an institutional review in conjunction with the
try offices.
plan preparation would have pointed to chal-
3. The outcomes of UN-Habitat support at country lenges ahead and increased the awareness of
level are not adequately captured at Headquar- what means could have been applied.
ters level, which is a lost opportunity for more
5. The need for more consultations, open and
efficient global level advocacy and adjustment
transparent communications and information
of global programmes. The practical experience
flow between management and staff at both
36 The MTSIP’s biennial work programmes were based on the four Headquarters and regional/country offices on
pillars that were approved by the Governing Council in 2003 and
thus conceptualised possibly in 2001, which imply a considerable
programmes is extremely important. This will
time lag from conceptualisation to implementation.
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
85
minimize uncertainties with respect to goals and alistic targets – and yet be prepared to accept
objectives of programmes and enhance the im- unexpected demands for support, for example,
pact of the ENOF. The preparation of the MTSIP emergency situations. The issue of availability of
Results Framework early on would have allowed adequate resources – financial and human – is a
more time for wider consultations and a higher serious continuing constraint in the implemen-
degree of consensus throughout the organiza- tation of the MTSIP at all levels, which requires
tion. There is a substantial imbalance in resource a constant dialogue with donors, and central
allocation between Headquarters and regional/ and local governments. An opportunity exists in
country offices, which among others, tends to middle-income countries to mobilize the coun-
disfavour communication flows from country tries’ own financial resources, which if exploited,
and regional offices to Headquarters. would result in increased funding to the poorer
countries. The countries’ participation in funding
6. It has proven difficult to forecast the size of the
of UN-Habitat inspired interventions is likely to
resource envelope, which would call for a flex-
enhance ownership and sustainability.
ible implementation process and setting of re-
86 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
12. Recommendations
The proposed recommendations are related to the supported in countries with a good potential
remaining period of MTSIP (2012-2013) and the for UN-Habitat interventions. Correspond-
Strategic Plan 2014-2019. The recommendations ingly, Habitat Country Programme Documents
for the 2012-2013 biennium are aimed at improving should be prepared or updated to reflect the
the performance of MTSIP, but equally valid for the individual countries’ need for sustainable
2014-2019 period of the strategic plan. The recom- urbanization and associated capacity develop-
mendations for the strategic plan should ideally be ment.
undertaken prior to the launch of the Plan in 2014.
3. In light of the difficulties that Focus Area 5 has
encountered, the scope should be reviewed in
Recommendations for the 2012-2013 order to take note of the lessons learned, and
Period possibly redirect the remaining resources for
Focus Area 5 to the preparation of the Strate-
MTSIP strategic planning gic Plan’s Focus Area for Urban Economy.
1. UN-Habitat should continue adopting the 4. Not all indicators of achievements have proved
strategic and results-based planning approach to be practicable, mainly because of inade-
for its programmes to ensure continued sharp- quate preparation and lack of resources for
ened focus and coherence. Transparently open baseline surveys and monitoring at country
consultations and involvement/participation level. Those indicators that are no longer
of the branches and units, as well as with the practicable should be abandoned, or replaced
regional and country offices should be the with new indicators, subject to these having
norm. This is to get a full set of inputs into continued relevance for the MTSIP and the
programme formulation and development and Strategic Plan.
to carry important stakeholders along when it
comes to the implementation stage in order to Organization
enhance the prospects for sustainable results.
Full and meaningful consultations and involve- 5. Management should review the proposed
ments would also facilitate better cooperation branches and units in the new organizational
and coordination in the spirit of the ENOF. structure and assure its sustainability and sub-
stantive scope. It should also be ensured that
2. More dedicated efforts should be made to branches, units and their staff are given clearly
fully involve the regional and country offices in defined terms of reference. Furthermore, the
the design, formulation and initiation of pro- following organizational aspects should be
grammes, so that all levels are in the picture considered:
from the start and understand their objectives,
purpose and rationale. Regional offices should • The policy function should be evident in
be encouraged to formulate strategic develop- the organization set-up to underscore the
ment frameworks for their respective regions importance of UN-Habitat’s continued
and countries – with resources allocated to policy dialogue and evolution. The Strategic
them for the purpose. The UNDAF/ Delivering Planning Unit could be expanded to include
as One process should be strengthened and the policy dimension.
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
87
11. Information at country level should be gath- 14. The further process of developing the Strate-
ered on results and experiences that signifi- gic Plan for 2014-2019 period should draw on
cantly influence the evolution of the normative the lessons learned from the MTSIP. Adequate
framework, which could feed into time should be devoted to developing the
UN-Habitat’s policy and strategic develop- mechanisms for its implementation (baseline
ment. Such information could also contribute data, institutional mechanisms, monitoring,
significantly to UN-Habitat’s flagship reports. A reporting and coordinating structures) be-
simplified system of country evaluations with fore implementation starts. Such preparation
limited resource requirements – complement- should include:
ing thematic evaluations – or rather Focus • Preparation of policy & strategy papers for
Area evaluations – should be institutionalized the seven Focus Areas consistent with the
in order to have a more solid base for deter- sustainable cities concept – the preparation
mining outcomes and impacts. Such five eval- of Focus Area 6 Risk Reduction and Reha-
uations could be conducted on a yearly basis. bilitation would benefit from a thematic
12. The progress reports (Headquarters) should evaluation that could help formulate the
primarily reflect on global and regional Focus Area;
achievements and present feature stories • Further development of the ENOF concept
based on the results in the countries that with a particular attention to the interplay
highlight urban trends and responses to between the Focus Areas and how syner-
urban development issues. An annex should gies can best be achieved;
be attached to the progress report – list-
ing all countries by region – and record the • Conduct of baseline studies as relevant for
achievements by country and main indicator. the Focus Areas and development/refine-
The global progress report could in this way ment of SMART indicators of achievements
provide a total simplified global overview of for the expected accomplishments.
UN-Habitat’s engagement and at the same
time present essential urban development
features and trends.
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
89
15. The Strategic Plan 2014-2019 should be Project design and rationalization of the
complemented with strategies for the various project portfolio
categories of countries (fragile states, disaster
17. The project-based approach should be man-
stricken countries, post-conflict countries,
aged in such a way that projects are formu-
least developed countries, low-income and
lated and implemented so that they constitute
middle-income countries) in order to indicate
integral components of an overall and holis-
UN-Habitat’s approaches and priorities for
tic programme – to enable a programmatic
engagement in terms of technical assistance
approach to be pursued. Projects should be
and funding. Furthermore, the Plan should
formulated and implemented in accordance
be complemented with strategies on how to
with the results based management concept
address urbanization at national and sub-na-
with special attention to their catalytic effects
tional levels and different sizes of cities (mega,
and their up-scaling potential and with due
primary, secondary and tertiary cities). Finally,
attention to the crosscutting issues.
the balance and relative emphasis between the
normative and operational work by category 18. Following the preparation of the Focus Area
of country and size of city should be indicated. policy and strategy papers, a thorough review
of UN-Habitat programmes, tools and the
16. A decentralized approach for country level
project portfolio should be undertaken and
engagement for countries in which UN-Habitat
subsequent adjustments of these to ensure a
would have a substantial potential for inter-
high degree of coherence of the portfolio with
ventions should be developed, which specifies
the Focus Areas.
the role of Habitat Programme Managers
and the National Urban Forums and how to
engage in the national policy dialogue,
UNDAF, Delivering as One, and cooperation
with donors and other development partners.
90 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
Annexes
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
91
5. The present TOR set out key elements of the view process; business processes; and resource
review of the implementation of the MTSIP mobilization. These areas respond to the orga-
(focusing more on the programmatic/substan- nization’s capacity with respect to delivering
tive Focus Areas, i.e. 1 to 5). They describe the MTSIP Focus Area 6, i.e. Excellence in Manage-
background, purpose, scope and focus, meth- ment.
odology, competences of the consultant to
8. UN-Habitat is now implementing the second
conduct the review, implementation arrange-
biennium of the current MTSIP. The formulation
ments, time schedule and expected delivera-
of a follow-up strategic framework for 2014-
bles.
2019 is also underway. An outline, which has
been prepared and discussed with the CPR
II. Background and context
already shows how UN-Habitat intends to in-
6. The MTSIP 2008-2013 was developed with corporate the current MTSIP Focus Areas in the
the intention of sharpening UN-Habitat’s fo- new strategic plan. UN-Habitat therefore rec-
cus and in alignment with the United Nations ognizes the need to have a review of the cur-
system-wide reform initiatives, including on rent MTSIP, focusing more on the substantive
coherence and results-based management. Focus Areas (Focus Areas 1-5), which will feed
The sharpened MTSIP focus is reflected in its into the preparation planning of the new stra-
six Focus Areas, comprising the following: (a) tegic plan for 2014-2019.
advocacy, monitoring and partnerships; (b) par-
ticipatory urban planning, management and 9. Other parallel institutional reviews are currently
governance; (c) pro-poor land and housing; (d) being undertaken to help assess the over-all
environmentally sound and affordable urban performance and effectiveness of UN-Habitat.
infrastructure and services; (e) strengthening These include an organizational review and re-
human settlements finance systems; and (f) ex- form, and a project portfolio review and reduc-
cellence in management. Furthermore, to fine- tion. In addition, thematic evaluations on gen-
tune the MTSIP Focus Areas, the MTSIP results der, youth, ERSO, SUF, water and sanitation,
framework was developed with clear strategic Global Land Tool Network and safer cities have
results, expected accomplishments, and indi- already been conducted. Findings and lessons
cators of achievement. This framework is the learned from these reviews and evaluations will
basis for planning, monitoring, evaluation and also inform the design of the new strategic plan
reporting on the implementation of the MTSIP. for 2014-2019
Focus Area Policy and Strategy Papers have
been developed for Focus Areas 1-5 providing III. Purpose of the second MTSIP review
clarity and explaining the focus of UN-Habitat’s 10. The purpose of the review is to assess progress
mission and strategies. In addition, new priori- on achievement of the MTSIP Focus Areas re-
ties (areas of emphasis) recently adopted under sults. It will assess efficiency and effectiveness
the leadership of the new Executive Director are with respect to the attainment of the key MTSIP
already integrated in the current MTSIP. objective of “sustainable urbanization created
by cities and regions that provide all citizens
7. The peer review conducted in October-Decem-
with adequate shelter, services, security and
ber 2009 was the first review of the MTSIP. It
employment opportunities regardless of age,
focused more on institutional and strategic
sex, and social strata”, and over-all expected ac-
fronts and less on substantive, programmatic
complishments. The review will build on exist-
and result based aspects of the plan. The re-
ing MTSIP progress reports and other MTSIP re-
view report provides a general assessment of
lated assessments / evaluations that have been
the impact of the plan on UN-Habitat, specif-
carried out so far, as well as related institutional
ically covering progress made on strategic and
processes such as the organizational review and
programmatic aspects; organizational structure
project portfolio review.
and alignment; programme planning and re-
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
93
4 Data collection, including desk reviews of relevant documents, interviews, group meetings September -November 2011
09.01.12 – 13.01.12 Interviews with UN-Habitat HQ staff The UN-Habitat Country Office in
Interviews with UN-Habitat Africa Regional Office staff Tanzania could possibly be included
16.01.12 – 20.01.15 Interviews with UN-Habitat Asia Regional Office staff The two visits will be conducted in
Interviews with UN-Habitat Latin America Regional Office staff parallel
23.01.12 – 27.01.12 Interviews with selected UN-Habitat Country offices Sri Lanka and Colombia were visited
Interviews with other stakeholders
Mr Laxman Perera,
Habitat Programme Manager
Mr M. L. Sunil Fernado,
Advisor, Ministry of Local Government &
Provincial Councils
Mr Leo Fonseka,
President Management Resources for
Good Governance (MaRGG)
Prof. Mahanama,
Dean Faculty of Architecture,
University of Maratuwa
Questionnaire Respondents
ments Foundation for the 2010-2011 biennium, 2012, Performance Report on the Implementation
HSP/GC/22/5, 20 January 2009 of the Programme Cooperation Agreement be-
tween the Government of Norway and UN-Habitat
UN-Habitat, 2011, United Nations/ Governing
for the Biennium 2010-2011
Council of the United Nations Human Settlements
Programme: Work programme of the United Na- UN-Habitat, 2012, Self-Assessment on the Progress
tions Human Settlements Programme and budget Made in the Implementation of the UN-Habitat’s
of the United Nations Habitat and Human Settle- Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan (MT-
ments Foundation for the 2012-2013 biennium, SIP) for 2008-2013
HSP/GC/23/5, 10 January 2011
UN-Habitat, 2011, End-of Programme Evaluation
Slum Upgrading Facility Pilot Programme, Evalua-
Proposed Strategic Frameworks
tion Report 4/2011
General Assembly, 2012, Programme 12 Human
Settlements: Results-Based Biennial Strategic Frame- UN-Habitat, 2011, Evaluation of the UN-Habitat
work for 2014-2015, 11 January 2012: Youth Programme & Urban Youth Fund, Evaluation
Report 2/2011
• Executive Direction and Management
UN-Habitat, 2011, A review of the portfolio of proj-
• Management and Administration ects and programmes in UN-Habitat as of December
• FA1: Urban Land, Legislation and Governance 2010, prepared by Kim Forss
• FA2: Urban Planning and Design UN-Habitat, 2011, Partnership Strategy, May 2011
• FA3: Urban Economy UN-Habitat, 2011, Evaluation of the Experimental
• FA4: Urban Basic Services Reimbursable seeding Operations (ERSO), Evalua-
tion Report 6/2011
• FA5: Housing and Slum Upgrading
UN-Habitat, 2011, Evaluation of Gender Main-
• FA6: Risk Reduction and Rehabilitation
streaming in UN-Habitat, Evaluation Report 1/2011y
• FA7: Research and Capacity Development 2011
General Assembly, 2010, Programme 12 Human
Proposed work programme and budget for the bi-
Settlements: Proposed strategic framework for the
ennium 2012-2013, 11 February 2011: Addendum,
period 2012-2013 – Part two: biennial programme
Midterm review of the implementation of the MTSIP
plan, 15 March 2010
for the period 2008-2013
General Assembly, 2008, Programme 12 Human
UN-Habitat, 2011, Document 01: Main Report of
Settlements: Proposed strategic framework for the
the First Water and Sanitation Trust Fund, Impact
period 2010-2011 – Part two: biennial programme
Study,
plan, 29 February 2008
UN-Habitat, 2011, Document 02: Kenya Country
General Assembly, 2006, Programme 12 Human
Impact Study
Settlements: Proposed strategic framework for the
period 2008-2009 – Part two: biennial programme UN-Habitat, 2011, Document 03: Nepal Country
plan, 30 May 2006 Impact Study
4. Question: In what ways have the new UN-Habitat 9. Question: In what way could or should UN-Habitat
organizational structure been tailored to the MTSIP support be prepared in order to best accommodates
and future strategic plans and how will it impact on countries’ priorities and needs?
planning and resource allocation?
Answer:
Answer:
Answer:
Answer:
12. Question: Does the current progress reporting system
adequately capture progress at global, regional and
country levels – and if not how could it be amended?
7. Question: How can it be avoided having two parallel
monitoring systems for the strategic plan Answer:
2014-2019 and who will be responsible for ensuring
that?
Answer:
13. Question: How could increased alignment with UNDAF
and One UN improved country level planning and
cooperation with UN partners and donors;
Answer:
14. Question: How are conventional and non-convention-
al donor contributions likely to evolve in the current
financial crisis and what should be done to balance
budgets and revenues?
Answer:
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
103
Answer:
Answer:
Answer:
Answer:
Answer:
104 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
Answer:
5. Question: Have the biennial work plans and budgets 11. Question: Do you find that the half-yearly progress
accommodated activities for your Focus Area ad- reports capture the achievement for your Focus Area
equately – or what constraints do you experience? adequately – if not what improvements could be
made?
Answer:
Answer:
Answer:
Answer:
Answer:
Answer:
Answer: Answer:
9. Question: Do you find the MTSIP Results Framework 15. Question: Is there any evidence that the work of
is able to adequately capture the results you find your Focus Areas has had or is likely to have an
significant? impact on country level policies and strategies?
Answer: Answer:
Answer:
106 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
2. Participatory planning, management, and governance; Inclusive urban planning, management and governance (UPMG)
improved at national and local levels
3. Access to land and housing for all; Improved access to land and housing
4. Environmentally sound basic urban infrastructure and services; Expanded access to environmentally sound basic urban
infrastructure services with a special focus on the unserved and
under-served
5. Strengthening human settlements finance systems Increased sustainable financing for affordable and social housing
and infrastructure
1. Question: Has a consistent UN-Habitat Country 4. Question: Does the Enhanced Normative and Op-
Programme been developed – and if so, how does it erational Framework (ENOF) promote sustainable
balance the normative and operational work? urbanization in the country and does ENOF enhances
coherence between normative and operational work
Answer: and the substantive Focus Areas that are supported in
ROAP: Except for the Pacific-Sub-Region, HCPDs were prepared the country?
for all four countries and three out of four had a good balance
Answer:
between normative and operational work. The Pacific Sub-Region
focussed on five core countries with an emphasis on operational ROAP: Only one country responded positively. Three countries
work. mentioned that ENOF was not very effective – one of these
mentioned that ENOF did not distinguish between a development
ROA: Six out of eight countries have HCPDs, three of which need
context and a disaster/post conflict context. One country did not
to be updated. The two countries that do not have a HCPD encoun-
respond.
ter difficult political situations. For those countries having a HCPD,
there is a good balance between normative and operational work. ROA: Six countries responded positively. One country mentioned
that ENOF was abstract and another that ENOF needed a revision.
ROLAC: All three countries have a HCPD, but one country needs to
have it updated. There is a good balance between normative and ROLAC: One country mentioned that ENOF could be more relevant
operational work. among others through increased communication with ROLAC and
Headquarters. One country referred to other coordination mecha-
nisms: HCPD, UNDAF, MTSIP (which however are integral parts of
2. Question: How do the UN-Habitat programmes and ENOF). One country did not respond.
projects that have been formulated within the UNDAF
contribute to achieving the MTSIP Focus Area results
1-5? 5. Question: Is the UN-Habitat support relevant to the
ministries responsible for urban planning, land, and
Answer: housing, and does it promote national priorities in
ROAP: Three countries worked within UNDAF, Vietnam participated relation to sustainable urbanization – including pro-
in the One-UN pilot project, and the Pacific Sub-Region is the poor mechanisms for financing of housing, and urban
process of preparing a UNDAF for 2013-2018. There is a wide vari- infrastructure and services?
ation in the work related to Focus Areas – one country worked in
Answer:
all five, one in only one, and the rest in between two and four.
ROAP: All five countries responded positively that their interven-
ROA: Five countries worked within UNDAF, and in three countries
tions support national urban policies.
the UN-Habitat support was related to government national plans.
Three countries were engaged in the Delivering as One initiative. ROA: All eight countries responded positively that their interven-
The countries were involved in one to three Focus Areas, FA4 being tions support national urban planning and housing policies, but
the most prominent. one country mentioned that limited funding was available and an-
other mentioned that the government only recently have prioritised
ROLAC: Two countries worked within UNDAF, and in one country
urban policies.
the UN-Habitat support was related to the government national
plan. One country was involved in all five Focus Areas (Ecuador), ROLAC: All five countries responded positively that their interven-
one in two, and the third one Mexico in at least one (the webpage tions support national urban policies.
for Mexico was not updated, so it was not possible from this source
to see the type of interventions).
6. Question: Is the UN-Habitat support as regards slum
upgrading and prevention relevant to local urban
3. Question: How do the UN-Habitat programmes and authorities, and how are Habitat partners mobilised
projects that have been formulated outside the and engaged in providing complementary support?
UNDAF contribute to achieving the MTSIP Focus Area
results 1-5 – and if not, what is the nature of this port- Answer:
folio? ROAP: Four countries responded that the UN-Habitat support is
relevant. China mentioned that the question is not relevant for
Answer:
China.
ROAP: Interventions outside the UNDAF (or DaO) also contributed
ROA: All eight countries responded that the UN-Habitat support is
to the MTSIP Focus Areas, especially 3 and 4. In one country disas-
relevant – one responded that it was mostly the normative aspects
ter recovery was mentioned.
and another that it was advocacy aspects.
ROA: In two countries, all interventions were within UNDAF (or
ROLAC: None of the three countries are directly involved with slum
DaO). Interventions outside UNDAF generally contributed to the
upgrading. The emphasis in Colombia is more related to security,
MTSIP Focus Areas. In one country disaster recovery was men-
climate change and risk reduction. In Ecuador the government is
tioned.
considering its policies on slums. In Mexico the support is directed
ROLAC: In one country, all interventions were within UNDAF. Inter- towards influencing local urban agendas.
ventions outside UNDAF generally contributed to the MTSIP Focus
Areas.
108 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
7. Question: What are the likely outcomes of the MTSIP ROA: Results are most commonly generated in accordance with
on slum dwellers’ situation in the country and what the MTSIP Results Framework. The response to reporting is very
would be the expected longer-term impacts? diversified, e.g.: according to programmes being implemented;
reporting to Headquarters in accordance with UNDAF/ One UN,
Answer: which is consistent with MTSIP as far as UN-Habitat’s support is
ROAP: Slum is not an issue in China. In the other four countries it concerned; according to template from Headquarters; and MTSIP
is reckoned that there is short-term outcomes where funding has reporting at country level is not clear and will need to be worked
be mobilised for upgrading and that longer-term outcomes will be out.
the result of increased recognition of the slum problem, housing ROLAC: Results are most commonly generated in accordance with
policies, housing financing, and security of tenure. the MTSIP Results Framework. Progress reports are prepared on a
ROA: All eight countries are in different ways attempting to monthly basis. One country mentions that it is difficult to translate
improve slum dwellers’ situation. The majority of countries strive to MTSIP into the operational framework. UN-Habitat reporting
improve slum dwellers situation through pro-poor housing policies according to UNDAF requirements is consistent with MTSIP.
and guidelines, access to finance, and rights-based approaches. It
is mentioned that financing is required to move from normative
interventions to larger scale operational interventions. 10. Question: To what extent is the UN-Habitat support/
ROLAC: Two countries are attempting to improve slum dwellers MTSIP likely to have the intended impact on national
situation through policy adjustments. One country did not make policies, strategies, capacity, and resource allocation
to promote sustainable urbanization?
any statements.
Answer:
ROAP: UN-Habitat has generally supported development of
8. Question: What major constraints or challenges have
policies and strategies in support of urbanization, especially
been encountered during the implementation of the
within the areas of housing, water & sanitation and solid waste
UN-Habitat support/ MTSIP and how could these be
management, and climate change. The likely consequence of
resolved?
policies being formally adopted is that resources are allocated
Answer: correspondingly.
ROAP: The constraints mentioned varied among the countries. ROA: UN-Habitat has generally supported development of
Access to funding/co-funding is seen as a major constraint. The policies and strategies in support of urbanization, especially
HPM arrangement is supported with limited funding, which does within the areas of housing, slum upgrading and prevention, and
not match the ambition and tasks to be performed. Country capac- resettlement. In some of the countries the policy development has
ity and commitments and access to resources limit the effect of been incorporated into the national development plans and thus
UN-Habitat interventions. The MTSIP disaster focus is weak, which contributed to resource allocation and capacity development.
would call for a broader framework and larger outcomes. ROLAC: UN-Habitat has generally supported development of
ROA: Lack of funding is generally seen as the major constraint policies and strategies in relation to urbanization, especially within
– both as regards funding of UN-Habitat office operations and the areas of housing and land management. Some of this support
funding for implementation of operational projects. Most of the was translated into the national development plan and legislation.
funding is mobilised locally, so more support from HQ is warranted
in generating funds. Lack of countries’ implementation capacity is
also a constraining factor. 11. Question: What is the likelihood that the government
and urban local government authorities will adhere to
ROLAC: Lack of funds – which warrants consolidated partnerships
the MTSIP policies and strategies?
with development agencies. The countries’ lack of knowledge of ur-
ban issues and implementation capacity. The amount of resources Answer:
required for internal reporting is seen as a constraining factor.
ROAP: The policy and strategy principles as advocated by
UN-Habitat – and as contained in the Habitat Agenda – are
likely to continue influencing policy formulation related to: urban
9. Question: Are results generated in accordance with
planning, management and governance; land management; and
the MTSIP Results Framework and how are the
housing – at national and local levels.
achievements monitored and reported at country
level? ROA: The policy and strategy principles as advocated by
UN-Habitat – and as contained in the Habitat Agenda and MTSIP
Answer: – are likely to continue influencing urban and housing policies.
ROAP: Results are most commonly generated in accordance with The UN-Habitat support has raised awareness of the MTSIP policy
the MTSIP Results Framework. One country mentioned that there is principles and is likely to have a catalytic effect. The participatory
no system for MTSIP monitoring. Six-monthly progress reports are planning and budgeting approach will facilitate translating policies
submitted to ROAP and Headquarters. Reporting to donors is as into actions. In a number of countries UN-Habitat’s support has
far as possible in accordance with the MTSIP Results Framework. influenced policy-making and national development plans and has
Vietnam reported according the One UN requirements. thus created a momentum for MTSIP policy and strategy principles
continuously being adhered to.
Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
109
ROLAC: Many alliances and partnerships have been built with 14. Question: How has the cooperation with other UN
national planning agencies and local government associations programmes facilitated the implementation of the
through networking and technical assistance. The governments UN-Habitat programmes and projects?
have included parts of the Habitat normative framework into poli-
cies and national plans. Answer:
ROAP: The cooperation with other UN agencies has been good.
In Vietnam the cooperation was found to be very positive and
12. Question: What would be the national priorities that generated good results – funding was channelled through One
should not be missed during the next plan period Plan Fund. In Sri Lanka – although not included in the One UN
2014-2019? pilot initiative – the One UN principles were pursued.
Answer:
ROAP: The cooperation with ROAP is very good and strong. The
cooperation with Headquarters is somewhat isolated apart from
Training and Capacity Building Branch, Disaster Branch, and some
global programmes. There is a need for improved procedures
related to: procurement, financial management, authorization of
payment, etc.
ROA: The coordination with ROA is generally effective and good
– although the response time could be improved. The coordination
with HQ is less effective and at times delayed responses occur,
which lead to some frustration.
ROLAC: The coordination with ROLAC is generally good. The
Headquarters response time is too long and in some cases the
response is not forthcoming. Coordination could be improved to
create better synergies.
110 Evaluation of the Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and Institutional Plan 2008-2013
Strategic Result Improved sustainable urbanization policies from local to global levels adopted
Indicators (a) Number of local authorities that adopt improved sustainable urbanization policies in ENOF countries
(c) Number of Enhanced Normative and Operational Framework (ENOF) countries that adopt improved poli-
cies on sustainable urbanization
(d) The number of stakeholders in ENOF countries who positively evaluate that UN-HABITAT’s support has
improved sustainable urbanization policies
Expected Accomplishments 1 Improved awareness of sus- 1 Habitat Agenda partners (HAP) 1 Monitoring of sustainable
tainable urbanization issues at actively participate in the formula- urbanization conditions and
the local to global levels tion of sustainable urbanization trends improved
policy
Indicators a) Number of media articles and a) Number of policy making forums a) Number of cities in ENOF
pro-grammes on sustainable in which HAP participate in ENOF countries with operational
urbanization issues coun-tries at the national level local urban observatories
b) Number of cities that have b) Number of policy making forums b) Number of concerned govern-
web pages covering sustain- in which HAP participate in ENOF ment agen¬cies in ENOF
able urbanization issues coun-tries at the local level countries that adopt good
practice monitoring tools
Sub-Expected Accomplishments 1.1 Effective dissemination 2.1 Improved awareness increase 3.1 Increased capacity for
evidence-based knowledge HAP participation implementation of urban
on urban issues monitoring systems
1.2 Expanded use of evidence- 2.2 HAP commit to agreed norms 3.2 Increased demand for
based knowledge in and principles for sustainable evidence-based knowledge
education urbanisation in policy making and prac-
tice, including sex- and age
disaggregated data
Strategic Result Inclusive urban planning, management and governance (UPMG) improved at national and local levels
Indicators a) Number of countries where UPMG addresses/incorporates one or more sustainable urbanisation dimensions
Indicators a) Number of countries that have a) Number of local/ national institu- a) Number of cities which
established rules, procedures tions in targeted countries that establish joint partnership
and mechanisms for promot- actively promote sustainable frameworks
ing inclusive UPMG urbanisation dimensions
b) Number of countries whose b) Number of institutions in targeted b) Number of action plans [and
policies, legislation and countries which received higher strategies] implemented
strategies incorporate/ reflect demand for support in UPMG
sustainable urbanisation
Sub-Expected 1.1 Improved policy analysis 2.1 Strengthened organisational 3.1 Improved inclusive action
Accomplishments structures and processes for planning
UPMG
1.2 Policy advocacy improved, 2.2 Improved competencies and 3.2 Enhanced strategic
including through enhanced base of human partnerships for UPMG
Campaign (see FA1) resources for UPMG
1.3 Increased application of 2.3 Improved development of, 3.3 Improved management
best policy practices access to and application of of financial resources for
tools for UPMG UPMG
Indicators Increased number of Habitat Agenda Partners improving access to land and housing
Increased number of countries implementing policies to improve access to land and housing
Expected 1 Improved land and housing 2 Security of tenure increased 3 Slum improvement and
Accomplishments policies implemented prevention policies promoted
Sub-Expected 1.1 Govt/HAP knowledge 2.1 Govt/HAP knowledge of 3.1 Govt/HAP knowledge
Accomplishments of innovative land and equitable land and housing on slum upgrading and
housing policies and rights increased prevention improved
programmes improved
1.2 Govt/HAP capacity to 2.2 Govt/HAP capacity to achieve 3.2 Govt/HAP capacity to
promote hazard resistant equitable land and housing develop slum upgrading
and sustainable housing rights strengthened and prevention policies and
construction increased strategies strengthened
1.3 Govt/HAP capacity to 2.3 Govt/HAP capacity to effectively 3.3 Govt/HAP supported
implement land and address housing, land and in implementing slum
housing policies increased property in crisisprone and post- upgrading and prevention
crisis contexts increased policies and strategies
Strategic Result Expanded access to environmentally sound basic urban infrastructure services with a special focus on the
unserved and underserved populations
Indicators a) Increase in the numbers of people in target communities with access to environmentally sound basic
urban infrastructure services.
b) Number of stakeholders reporting positive perception of UN-Habitat’s contribution to expanded access for
the poor to basic urban infrastructure services
Expected 1 An enabling policy and 2 Increased institutional effi ciency 3 Enhanced consumer demand
Accomplishments institutional framework and effectiveness in the provi- for effi cient and environmen-
promotes expanded access to sion of basic urban infrastructure tally sustainable basic urban
environmentally sound urban services infrastructure and services
infrastructure and services
Indicators a) Number of countries progres- a) Numbers of service providers a) Number of consumers rank-
sively adopting relevant recovering at least operation and ing basic urban infrastructure
policies that aim to expand maintenance cost of services services high in their priority
access to environmentally of needs
sound urban infrastructure
and services
Strategic Result Improved access to sustainable financing for affordable housing and infrastructure in targeted countries
Expected 1 Increased financing for 2 Empowered consumers (incl. 3 Effective local institutions
Accomplishments affordable housing and women’s organizations) access catalyse access to finance
infrastructure financing for affordable housing for affordable housing and
and infrastructure infrastructure
Indicators a) Amounts of private sector a) Number of bankable projects in a) Number of local institutions
funds available for affordable targeted areas ready for assisting with development
housing and infrastructure in commercial fi nancing of bankable projects
targeted communities
b) Number of targeted banks b) Number of consumers who report b) Number of targeted local
that perceive affordable increased confi dence to submit institutions that report an
housing and infrastructure loan applications increase in capacity to
as a attractive business finance affordable housing
opportunity and infrastructure
Sub-Expected 1.1 Increased financial 2.1 Better informed consumers with 3.1 Effective local finance
Accomplishments institution awareness particular reference to facilities specifically for
of new market savings groups affordable housing and
opportunities for affordable infrastructure
housing and infrastructure
1.2 Financial institutions adopt 2.2 Effective community based 3.2 Strengthened local
policies to make fi nance organizations increase access to institutions enable
available for affordable financing investments in affordable
housing, land and housing and infrastructure
infrastructure projects
Strategic Result UN-HABITAT delivers MTSIP planned results effectively and effi ciently
Indicators a) Percentage of CPR Members who assess increased effi ciency and effectiveness
Sub-Expected 1.1 Strengthened staff 2.1 Rationalised organisational 3.1 Programmes derived from
Accomplishments competencies related to the structure MTSIP results
MTSIP
1.2 Knowledge management 2.2 MTSIP focus area result delivery 3.2 Performance measurement
systems effectively utilised system operational and evaluation informs
decisionmaking and
programming
Evaluation of the
Implementation of UN-Habitat’s
Medium-Term Strategic and
Institutional Plan 2008-2013
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| | | | | | ||||||||| |||||||
| | | | | ||| r a t i o n a l F r a m e w o r k
||||||
|||||
| | | | ||| d O pe Enhan |||||
| | | a n c e d |
| ||| | | |
a ti v e
A 6: E x c e l l e n c e i n M a n a g emen
t
N or m ||||||||
| | E . FOC ativ ||
| | | |||| Norm U S A R F O C U S A U S e Cr
| C ||||||| | R EA 5: an os
||| ||| ced || FO | | ||| | | | | | | | S tren
A R EA d O s-
a n | | | | | | | | | | g t p
6: e
h ||||| ||||| S AREA 4: Environ hen
|||| |||||
cu
|||| FOCU ed Ex r
tti
| men
|| |||
||
|
|||| En
| | | c
||||
at
ng Fram anage
| | | tall H
|||| ||||| um
ion
yS
||||
| | | | 3 : P r o m o t i o
Iss
| | | A n o
ell
||||
||| ||| RE f Pro ou a
al
||||
|
|||| SA
ue
nd
en
|
-po
|
|||||
|
| U
||||
| o
s C rk |||||||
|
n
||||
ce
| C B
||||
||| Planning, Manag rL a
FO
Se
|
|||||
rba n an
||||
|||||
in
|
ros
e
eme
||||
ttl
| | U d
|||
wo
:
||||
|
sic
||||||
M
|| 2 nt
|
|
em
|
|
|
s-cu
|
|
EA
|
|
itoring and Part an
|
|
Ur
|
||||
|
|
n
an
|||
||||||
|||||
ent
||||||
|||||
R o ner d
ba
M
|
|||||
A
dH
,
|
y
ttin
s
||||
|||||
c
s Fi
n In
h
|
ca
|
||||||||
ip
Go
|||||
||||||
ou
m
|
US
||||
vo
||||||||
|
|
|||||||
nan
g Iss
ve
ent.
|
fras
sin
|
||||||
|
OC
|
|
|
rn a
|||||||||
fo
|
||||||
d
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
g. F
:A
|
truct
c
rS
||| F
|
|||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
e Syst
|||||||||||
nce
ues ||||||||
|
A1
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
ust
|
OCUS
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
. FOC
a ina
|
OCUS ARE
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
b le Ur banizati
|
|
|
|
US AREA 2: U
|
|
|
AREA 3: Pr
|
|
||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
F
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||
omot
|
|
|||||
||
||||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||||
on.
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
|
|
|
||
|
|
|
|
rba
|
|
||||
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
ion
|
|
|
||| |
|
|
|
5
|
|||
||||
|
nP
|
|
|
||||||
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|
:
|||
||||||||
|
|
||||
|
AR
|
|||
|
||||
|
|
|
S
of
|
|
|
la
||||
|||||||
|
||||
||||
|
tr
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
nn
|
|
|||||
|
|
||
E
Pro
||||
|
|
eng
|
|| | |
|
|
||||
|
|
United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) |||
|
in g
|
A4
||||||
||||
|||
||||||
|
|||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||| |||
|
|
|||||
|||
|
|
|
,M ||||
|
|
|
po
|
||||
th
|
|
P. O. Box 30030, 00100 Nairobi GPO KENYA
|
|
:E
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ana
|||||
|
|
|
|
ene
|
|
rL
|
| ||||
|
e. |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
n
|
|||
Tel: 254-020-7623120 (Central Office)
|
gem
|
|
an
|
|
||||
|
c
|||||
|
vir
|
||
||||
||||
n |
||
|
|
a
d
da e nt and Govern |
|
|
on |||
|
|
|
|
|
|
www.unhabitat.org
|
|
|
|||||
Hu
|
|
|
||||
s.
| | | | ||||||| |||
|
nd
|
me
|||
||
|
|||
|
|||
| e
||||
H |
m
|
|||| |||||||
|
| c
|
ousin
|
an nta | i
|
g. |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
erv
|
|
||||
|
|
|
|
|||
|||| |||
|
||||
lly
|
Se
||
|
S |
||||
|
|
|
S d
||
|
||
|||| t
|
|||
|||
tle oun n
|
|
|
re a
||
|||| |
|
|| ||||
|
me d Bas
||
ic Urban Infrastructu
|
|||| ||||||| | | |
|
nts | | | |
|
||||| ||| |||
| |
||
|
|||| ||||||| | | | |||||
Fina
|||||| |||| |||||| |||
|||
n c e | | | | | | | | | | |
|||| ||
|||| |||||||| ||||||||||
|| Systems
. ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||| ||| |||
|||| ||||| ||||||| | | | | | ||||| |||||||| |||||||
||||||||| |||||| ||||| |||
||||
||||| |||||
|||||| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| | | | | ||||| | | | | ||||
||||| |||||||| | | |||||
|||||| ||||||||||| |||||||| |||||
|||||| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| | | | | |
|||||||| ||||
|||||||||||| ||||||||
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
HS/004/13E
ISBN(Series): 978-92-1-132028-2
ISBN (Volume): 978-92-1-132544-7
JULY 2012