Title: Vulnerability analysis: Methodologies, Purpose, and Policy Application
1Vulnerability analysisMethodologies, Purpose,
and Policy Application
- Susanne Milcher
- Specialist, Poverty and Economic Development
- UNDP Regional Centre
- Bratislava
- (14 June 2006)
2Outline
- The need of analysis and data for policy/project
design and monitoring - Qualitative versus quantitative approach
- Examples of both approaches
- Semi-structured interviews/focus groups on people
living with HIV/Aids - Household survey on Roma and the displaced
3Need of vulnerability analysis
- How can vulnerable groups, their causes of
exclusion and particular needs be identified
without disaggregated quantitative data
(multidimensional aspects, double
marginalisation)? - How can national-level policies that aim ensuring
the sustainable inclusion of vulnerable groups be
designed and resources be allocated without
estimates of their size, problems and causes of
problems? - How can priorities and sector capacity
deficiencies be identified without complementary
in-depth qualitative research? - How can policies be monitored and evaluated on
their impact on vulnerable groups without data?
4The need of analysis
- What kind of analysis?
- Socioeconomic status
- Human rights aspects
- Legal aspects (frameworks)
- Who elaborates it?
- The issue of trust and credibility
- Participation
- Who is its target?
- Public en large
- National governments
- International organizations/partners
5The role of data/indicators
- Relevant profiles of vulnerability in the region
are necessary for adequate programmatic and
policy responses - Those most in need remain hidden behind the
national averages - Without a clear picture of the status and
determinants of exclusion and/or discrimination,
actions are rather intuitive - Can any analyses, resource allocation and policy
be serious if not backed by data? - Setting targets, baselines
- Monitoring the progress
- Measuring the outcomes
- Assessing the impact
6Quantitative versus qualitative approach
- Quantitative approach
- Theory, hypotheses (i.e. women are more
vulnerable to poverty because they face higher
unemployment, lower education, discrimination,
etc.) - Indicators needed (employment rate, unemployment
rate, poverty rate, educational attainments) - Data collection (labour force survey) questions
on employment activity, income in the last month,
job search, educational attainments and enrolment
individual level data to be able to account for
sex, age, ethnicity, etc.) - Goal gt Status registration, correlations and
causal links
7Quantitative versus qualitative approach (cont.)
- Qualitative approach
- Social reality, social constructs
- The meaning and reasons of human actions and
decision-making result from interaction and
therefore can only be observed through
understanding the social structures determining
these actions - Information/data collection (interviews,
observation, focus groups) e.g. information on
the extent and types of discrimination, quality
of social services, satisfaction of beneficiaries - Theory, hypotheses development
- Goal gt Perceptions and attitudes registration,
priority identification
8Characteristics of quantitative research
- Representative and comparable
- Causal analysis, identification of inequalities
- Researcher pre-determines the communication
(close) - Limited participation
- Hypotheses, questionnaires, (random) sampling,
fieldwork - Objective and distanced analysis
- Conclusions based on a statistical logical
analysis (deductive)
9Characteristics of qualitative research
- Interactive and communicative
- Hypotheses developing
- Interpretative, understanding linkages
- Dynamic and flexible process
- Subjective
- Theoretical sampling
- Explanatory data analysis
- Conclusions based on repeated experiences
(inductive)
10Criticism to both approaches
- Qualitative
- - sample too small (1-5 people or single case
study) - - analysis not representative, subjective
- - cannot make generalizations
- Quantitative
- - distance to reality
- - reductive
- - limited participation or dynamic interaction
11Which approach to choose?
- Choose the approach that better fits to the type
of information you want to get (status or
perceptions) and the need for this information
(resource allocation, priority setting, causal
analysis) - Combining both approaches for proper
vulnerability analysis possible but time and
cost-extensive - Better use existing data and research, proxies
- Both approaches have to be adapted to objective
of research and social reality (i.e. MDG
indicators, questions to address gender or
issues, sampling and fieldwork focus group
design, types of questions asked, moderation)
12Example People living with HIV/Aids
- Type of information collected
- Perceptions of people living with HIV/Aids and
relevant stakeholders on the type of challenges
for this group and the institutions in terms of
access, quality and availability to health care,
education, employment - Process
- Identification of participants, close cooperation
with NGOs working with target community - Develop focus groups/interviews sensitive and
responsive to different sub-groups (IDUs, men
having sex with men, sex workers and parental
infected children) - Questions and moderation
- Transcript processing and analysis
13Example Roma and displaced household survey
(cont.)
- Type of information collected
- Status of Roma, displaced (IDPs/refugees) and
majority living in close proximity and
determinants of vulnerability - Process
- Two separate questionnaires (status of the
household and of each individual member) - Sampling households in areas with compact Roma
population (municipalities or neighborhoods with
share of Roma population at and above the
national average), majorities living in close
proximity to Roma and IDPs/refugees where
relevant - Fieldwork (interviewer training, Roma assistant
interviewers) - Data clean up, processing and analysis
14Example Roma and displaced household survey
(cont.)
- MDG indicators poverty rate, enrolment rate,
maternal and infant mortality rate, access to
water and sanitation - Social exclusion indicators (long-term)
unemployment rate, ethnic and gender ratio of
unemployment, items in household, political
participation, access to health and credit
services, land - Vulnerability profiles of all members of the
household (special needs of elderly, women,
children, low educated, unemployed, poor) - Comparability across countries
- Comparability to national HBS and LFS could give
an idea of the distance from national averages - Data on the status of non-Roma living in close
proximity could give an idea of the non-group
related determinants of vulnerability
15The issue of Schools for disabled - SEE
16The issue of Schools for disabled a broader
picture
17The issue of Schools for disabled
18Thank you!
- Bratislava Regional Center
- 35 Grosslingova
- 81109 Bratislava, Slovak Republic
- 421 2 59337 111
- www.undp.org/europeandcis
- http//roma.undp.sk
- http//vulnerability.undp.sk
19Education gender gap, Macedonia
20Correlation between occupation and skill level
21Unemployment by skill level
22Unemployment by age
23Unemployment by sex
24Vicious circle of outstanding payments