Type of evaluation: Final Evaluation
Purpose: Complete a final evaluation of the FCDO-funded SHAPE programme in Afghanistan
Commissioners: Afghanistan Head of Delegation, IFRC, Country Representative Afghanistan, British Red Cross
Audience: FCDO, ARCS, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) Afghanistan Delegation, IFRC Regional Office in Kuala Lumpur and IFRC Geneva Office, the British Red Cross and Federation-wide partners including participating National Societies, external partners.
Reporting to: Evaluation Management Team
Timeframe: Up to 30 flexible working days over the period of April to June of 2026
Methodology: Mixed Method approach drawing on qualitative and quantitative data and using triangulation and contribution analysis
Location: Afghanistan (multiple locations)
Background
The FCDO funded SHAPE programme contributes to the IFRC Unified Plan 2024-2026 in Afghanistan, the objectives and outcomes of which are designed to support the Afghan Red Crescent Society’s (ARCS) National Society Development Plan 2024-2026, enabling the ARCS to deliver sustainable core services, as well as to support longer term recovery activities of the IFRC Afghanistan Emergency Appeal.
The programme objectives and their alignment with the ARCS Strategic Plan are as follows:
In 2025, following a Mid-Term Review the programme was refined into 5 main sectors of support (Disaster Management, Supporting Women and Girls, Health, Humanitarian Diplomacy, and National Society Development).
As the programme design was based on the IFRC Unified Plan and its MEAL framework, the outcomes and outputs were not specific to the SHAPE programme and there was no independent Theory of Change.
Evaluation Purpose and Scope
Purpose: The purpose of this final evaluation is to assess if and how the Afghanistan SHAPE Programme achieved its intended objectives and the extent to which it contributed to meaningful changes for affected communities. It will go beyond reviewing progress against planned objectives. The evaluation will also identify key learning and actionable recommendations to inform the design and implementation of future programming in Afghanistan.
Scope:
Evaluation Objectives and Criteria.
Objectives
The review will assess the SHAPE programme’s relevance and appropriateness, effectiveness, and coherence through these objectives:
Criteria
The evaluation of the Afghanistan SHAPE programme will focus on three main criteria in line with the IFRC Framework for Evaluations 2024. The framework provides a structured approach to ensure that reviews and evaluations are systematic, transparent, and useful.
Evaluation Methodology.
The evaluation will follow the IFRC Framework for Evaluation 2024, focusing on best practices in planning, management, and execution. The evaluation team will provide a detailed methodology linking to financial aspects and ensuring practicality for learning.
The evaluation’s specific methodologies will be developed by the review team in close collaboration with the evaluation management team (EMT). It will employ mixed method approach.
Desktop Review: Desktop review of relevant organizational and operational background documents and history relating to ARCS and IFRC, including national policies and SOPs, prior IFRC reports, and any relevant sources of primary and secondary data, such as exit surveys, post-distribution monitoring (PDM) reports, recovery assessment report, learning review reports and other evaluations/reviews relevant to the project.
The detailed evaluation design is to be created by the evaluation team lead by the consultant; however, the following should be considered:
Evaluation Team and Management Team
Evaluation Management Team
An evaluation management team (EMT) will be appointed to manage and oversee the evaluation and ensure that it upholds Terms of Reference and the IFRC Framework for Evaluation. The WMT consists of 4-5 members that are non-operational:
EMT Roles And Responsibilities
The EMT in coordination with ARCS, IFRC Afghanistan Country Delegation and BRC, will ensure the following:
Evaluation Team
The evaluation team will be led by a suitably qualified and experienced consultant(s) who will be able to complete the deliverables of the evaluation in Afghanistan and has the relevant security training .
Review Team Roles and Responsibilities
The review team under the leadership of the consultant team leader will:
Deliverables
The evaluation consultant will provide the following:
Proposed Timeline.
Activity - Location - Days - Deliverable
Kick-off discussion with EMT and operations team - Remote - 1 -
Literature review, develop and submit Inception Report - Remote - 3 - Inception Report submitted
Review and approval of Inception Report by EMT - Remote - 1 -
Data collection in country (KIIs, participatory FGDs, etc.) - Kabul and targeted locations - 10
Conduct preliminary debriefing, validation of findings, and lessons learned sessions - Kabul - 2 - Preliminary Debriefing Sessions completed
Organize and analyze collected data - Remote - 4 -
Prepare and submit first draft of report with annexes - Remote - 5 -
Findings Presentations/Workshops online - Remote - 1 - Findings Presentations/Workshops delivered
Stakeholder review of the draft report - Remote - 1
Finalise and submit final report and summary document - Remote - 2 - Final Report and Summary Document submitted
Submit cleaned data sets and inventory - Remote - 0.5 - Cleaned data sets and inventory submitted
Final report approval - Remote - Final report approval by Commissioners
Management response by country team and ARCS - Kabul - Management response form
Evaluation Quality and Ethical Standards.
To uphold IFRC Evaluation Framework 2024 standards: The evaluators should take all reasonable steps to ensure that the evaluation is designed and conducted to respect and protect the rights and welfare of people and the communities of which they are members, and to ensure that the evaluation is technically accurate, reliable, and legitimate, conducted in a transparent and impartial manner, and contributes to organisational learning and accountability. Therefore, the evaluation team should adhere to the evaluation standards and specific, applicable practices outlined in the IFRC Evaluation Framework accompanying this TOR. The IFRC Evaluation Standards are:
It is also expected that the review will respect the seven Fundamental Principles of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement: 1) humanity, 2) impartiality, 3) neutrality, 4) independence, 5) voluntary service, 6) unity, and 7) universality.
Further information can be obtained about these principles at: www.ifrc.org/what/values/principles/index.asp
Minimum master’s degree in humanitarian, development, or related fields.
At least 10 years of experience in conducting reviews/evaluations, especially in protracted or emergency humanitarian contexts. Well versed in review/evaluation approaches and methodologies.
Experience in participatory approaches and methodologies suitable to the local context.
Understanding and experience with the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement is required.
Technical expertise in relevant sectors (e.g., community resilience and climate change, cash assistance, health, livelihood, protection) is an advantage.
Strong analytical skills for synthesizing findings, drawing conclusions, and preparing well-written reports.
Excellent English communication skills (writing and speaking)
Knowledge of Pashto/Dari is an asset.
Previous experience in Afghanistan and ability to engage with diverse communities.
Interested applicants should submit their application to [email protected] by 3/4/2026. In the subject line, please state the consultancy you are applying for, your company name, OR last name and first name. (SUBJECT: Afghanistan SHAPE Programme Final Evaluation. Last Name, First Name).
Application materials should include:
Curriculum Vitae (CV) for all applicants involved in the consultancy.
Cover letter summarizing relevant experience for this evaluation.
Financial proposal outlining daily consultancy fees and total cost of the evaluation (in CHF). Estimated travel, per diem and other costs should be included.
Technical proposal (max 3 pages) including approach, methodology, and timeline.
Contact details of three professional references.
Two samples of past review/evaluation reports in English, where the applicant is the sole or lead author.
Application materials are non-returnable, and we thank you in advance for understanding that only short- listed candidates will be contacted for the next step in the application process. The selection panel does not have the capacity to respond to any requests for application feedback. Please take note that expressions of interest that do not cover these requirements will not be considered, and IFRC reserves the right to reject any incomplete applications. We look forward to receiving your applications!
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