Knowledge-Based Country Programs : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Experience

The World Bank Group is currently engaged in reflection and debate on how to improve the delivery of development support. Part of this debate concerns strengthening the knowledge agenda. The findings of this evaluation are particularly relevant because they speak directly to questions that the institution is deliberating. In particular, they address four key aspects of the “science of delivery”: the role of local partners or local knowledge hubs; consultation with clients and other stakeholders in the process of designing knowledge services; delivery of knowledge on issues that are relevant to the client; and improving the way the Bank Group learns from upper-middle-income countries and intermediating this knowledge to other countries. The evaluation assesses knowledge-based activities in nine country programs selected from 48 knowledge-intensive programs supported by the Bank Group. It identifies the factors in the success or failure of those activities as they contribute to policy making or development outcomes. It also identifies areas of strength for the Bank Group as well as areas of weakness or risk. The main objective of the evaluation is to learn lessons from practices in a focus group of high-income and upper-middle-income countries that have knowledge-based programs with the Bank Group. The findings have implications for the Bank Group’s knowledge work, including governance and incentives. Over the past 15 years, Bank Group country programs have shifted toward more intensive delivery of knowledge services relative to lending, and this trend is expected to continue. The evaluation was done on economic and sector work and non-lending technical assistance activities selected from a purposive sample of knowledge-intensive country programs. In addition, the evaluation assessed International Finance Corporation Advisory Services for their synergy with the Bank’s analytical and advisory activities. The lessons from this evaluation could help leverage the Bank Group’s global knowledge to meet the needs of countries that mainly rely on knowledge services and are not pressed for financing.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Independent Evaluation Group
Format: Book biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2016-07-15
Subjects:KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT, KNOWLEDGE SERVICES, SOLUTIONS BANK, THINK TANKS, LEARNING, LEARNING ORGANIZATIONS, COPORATE CULTURE, CONSULTATION, KNOWLEDGE HUBS, SCIENCE OF DELIVERY, DELIVERY OF KNOWLEDGE, KNOWLEDGE SHARING,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24704
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spelling dig-okr-10986247042021-04-23T14:04:27Z Knowledge-Based Country Programs : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Experience Independent Evaluation Group KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT KNOWLEDGE SERVICES SOLUTIONS BANK THINK TANKS LEARNING LEARNING ORGANIZATIONS COPORATE CULTURE CONSULTATION KNOWLEDGE HUBS SCIENCE OF DELIVERY DELIVERY OF KNOWLEDGE KNOWLEDGE SHARING The World Bank Group is currently engaged in reflection and debate on how to improve the delivery of development support. Part of this debate concerns strengthening the knowledge agenda. The findings of this evaluation are particularly relevant because they speak directly to questions that the institution is deliberating. In particular, they address four key aspects of the “science of delivery”: the role of local partners or local knowledge hubs; consultation with clients and other stakeholders in the process of designing knowledge services; delivery of knowledge on issues that are relevant to the client; and improving the way the Bank Group learns from upper-middle-income countries and intermediating this knowledge to other countries. The evaluation assesses knowledge-based activities in nine country programs selected from 48 knowledge-intensive programs supported by the Bank Group. It identifies the factors in the success or failure of those activities as they contribute to policy making or development outcomes. It also identifies areas of strength for the Bank Group as well as areas of weakness or risk. The main objective of the evaluation is to learn lessons from practices in a focus group of high-income and upper-middle-income countries that have knowledge-based programs with the Bank Group. The findings have implications for the Bank Group’s knowledge work, including governance and incentives. Over the past 15 years, Bank Group country programs have shifted toward more intensive delivery of knowledge services relative to lending, and this trend is expected to continue. The evaluation was done on economic and sector work and non-lending technical assistance activities selected from a purposive sample of knowledge-intensive country programs. In addition, the evaluation assessed International Finance Corporation Advisory Services for their synergy with the Bank’s analytical and advisory activities. The lessons from this evaluation could help leverage the Bank Group’s global knowledge to meet the needs of countries that mainly rely on knowledge services and are not pressed for financing. 2016-07-15T16:16:48Z 2016-07-15T16:16:48Z 2016-07-15 Book 978-1-4648-0223-2 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24704 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Publication
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
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region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
KNOWLEDGE SERVICES
SOLUTIONS BANK
THINK TANKS
LEARNING
LEARNING ORGANIZATIONS
COPORATE CULTURE
CONSULTATION
KNOWLEDGE HUBS
SCIENCE OF DELIVERY
DELIVERY OF KNOWLEDGE
KNOWLEDGE SHARING
KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
KNOWLEDGE SERVICES
SOLUTIONS BANK
THINK TANKS
LEARNING
LEARNING ORGANIZATIONS
COPORATE CULTURE
CONSULTATION
KNOWLEDGE HUBS
SCIENCE OF DELIVERY
DELIVERY OF KNOWLEDGE
KNOWLEDGE SHARING
spellingShingle KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
KNOWLEDGE SERVICES
SOLUTIONS BANK
THINK TANKS
LEARNING
LEARNING ORGANIZATIONS
COPORATE CULTURE
CONSULTATION
KNOWLEDGE HUBS
SCIENCE OF DELIVERY
DELIVERY OF KNOWLEDGE
KNOWLEDGE SHARING
KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
KNOWLEDGE SERVICES
SOLUTIONS BANK
THINK TANKS
LEARNING
LEARNING ORGANIZATIONS
COPORATE CULTURE
CONSULTATION
KNOWLEDGE HUBS
SCIENCE OF DELIVERY
DELIVERY OF KNOWLEDGE
KNOWLEDGE SHARING
Independent Evaluation Group
Knowledge-Based Country Programs : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Experience
description The World Bank Group is currently engaged in reflection and debate on how to improve the delivery of development support. Part of this debate concerns strengthening the knowledge agenda. The findings of this evaluation are particularly relevant because they speak directly to questions that the institution is deliberating. In particular, they address four key aspects of the “science of delivery”: the role of local partners or local knowledge hubs; consultation with clients and other stakeholders in the process of designing knowledge services; delivery of knowledge on issues that are relevant to the client; and improving the way the Bank Group learns from upper-middle-income countries and intermediating this knowledge to other countries. The evaluation assesses knowledge-based activities in nine country programs selected from 48 knowledge-intensive programs supported by the Bank Group. It identifies the factors in the success or failure of those activities as they contribute to policy making or development outcomes. It also identifies areas of strength for the Bank Group as well as areas of weakness or risk. The main objective of the evaluation is to learn lessons from practices in a focus group of high-income and upper-middle-income countries that have knowledge-based programs with the Bank Group. The findings have implications for the Bank Group’s knowledge work, including governance and incentives. Over the past 15 years, Bank Group country programs have shifted toward more intensive delivery of knowledge services relative to lending, and this trend is expected to continue. The evaluation was done on economic and sector work and non-lending technical assistance activities selected from a purposive sample of knowledge-intensive country programs. In addition, the evaluation assessed International Finance Corporation Advisory Services for their synergy with the Bank’s analytical and advisory activities. The lessons from this evaluation could help leverage the Bank Group’s global knowledge to meet the needs of countries that mainly rely on knowledge services and are not pressed for financing.
format Book
topic_facet KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
KNOWLEDGE SERVICES
SOLUTIONS BANK
THINK TANKS
LEARNING
LEARNING ORGANIZATIONS
COPORATE CULTURE
CONSULTATION
KNOWLEDGE HUBS
SCIENCE OF DELIVERY
DELIVERY OF KNOWLEDGE
KNOWLEDGE SHARING
author Independent Evaluation Group
author_facet Independent Evaluation Group
author_sort Independent Evaluation Group
title Knowledge-Based Country Programs : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Experience
title_short Knowledge-Based Country Programs : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Experience
title_full Knowledge-Based Country Programs : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Experience
title_fullStr Knowledge-Based Country Programs : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Experience
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge-Based Country Programs : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Experience
title_sort knowledge-based country programs : an evaluation of world bank group experience
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2016-07-15
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24704
work_keys_str_mv AT independentevaluationgroup knowledgebasedcountryprogramsanevaluationofworldbankgroupexperience
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