Jump to: navigation, search
Line 106: Line 106:
                 <div class="col-md-8">
                 <div class="col-md-8">
                         <h3 class="mega_title text-center"><b>Manifesto</b></h3>
                         <h3 class="mega_title text-center"><b>Manifesto</b></h3>
                         <div class="policy_desc"> [https://www.worldbank.org/en/research/dime DIME] is the impact evaluation unit of the World Bank Research Group.
                         <div class="policy_desc">


Part of DIME’s mission is to intensify the production of and access to public goods that improve the quantity and quality of global development research, while lowering the costs of doing IE for the entire research community.
The DIME Wiki is a public good, targeted to all researchers and M&E specialists at the World Bank, clients who are managing data collection efforts in the field, donor institutions, NGOs and governments. While there are many existing impact evaluation resources, none meet the specific gap the DIME Wiki aims to fulfill: a resource focused on practical implementation guidelines rather than theory, open to the public, easily searchable, suitable for users of varying levels of expertise, up-to-date with the latest technological advances in electronic data collection.  


DIME’s interest is to build the institutions that will improve developmental effectiveness over time. We do not compete with other researchers. We provide the institutional space for all researchers to do better, more important work to improve the lives of poor and vulnerable people around the world.  
[https://www.worldbank.org/en/research/dime DIME] is the impact evaluation unit of the World Bank Research Group. Part of DIME’s mission is to intensify the production of and access to public goods that improve the quantity and quality of global development research, while lowering the costs of doing IE for the entire research community. The Wiki is developed and maintained by the DIME Analytics team, a new initiative to provide data quality assurance to all DIME impact evaluations. The Wiki is funded by the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development through the i2i Trust Fund.  
 
</div>
Data is the engine of applied development economics. While donors and researchers spend a lot of time and resources polishing funding proposals and final reports, very little to no effort is devoted to setting quality standards for data collection.
 
DIME has taken up this challenge with the creation of DIME Analytics, a small team responsible for developing and overseeing data quality protocols and pushing measurement frontiers through experimentation.
 
The Wiki is funded by the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development through the i2i Trust Fund. </div>
                          
                          
                 </div>
                 </div>

Revision as of 21:13, 7 September 2017


Cross-cutting Resources



Featured Content

<dailyfeaturedpage></dailyfeaturedpage>


Manifesto

The DIME Wiki is a public good, targeted to all researchers and M&E specialists at the World Bank, clients who are managing data collection efforts in the field, donor institutions, NGOs and governments. While there are many existing impact evaluation resources, none meet the specific gap the DIME Wiki aims to fulfill: a resource focused on practical implementation guidelines rather than theory, open to the public, easily searchable, suitable for users of varying levels of expertise, up-to-date with the latest technological advances in electronic data collection.

DIME is the impact evaluation unit of the World Bank Research Group. Part of DIME’s mission is to intensify the production of and access to public goods that improve the quantity and quality of global development research, while lowering the costs of doing IE for the entire research community. The Wiki is developed and maintained by the DIME Analytics team, a new initiative to provide data quality assurance to all DIME impact evaluations. The Wiki is funded by the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development through the i2i Trust Fund.