Go to ILO main website
Back to index

Strengthening the Resilience of Syrian Women and Girls and Host Communities in Türkiye - Final evaluation

eval_number:
3168
eval_url:
https://webapps.ilo.org/ievaldiscovery/eval/3168
location:
country:
Türkiye
region:
Europe and Central Asia

country:
Inter-Regional
region:
Inter-Regional

eval_title:
Strengthening the Resilience of Syrian Women and Girls and Host Communities in Türkiye - Final evaluation
recommendations:
date:
2021-02-09 00:00:00.0
themes:
theme:
Conditions of work & equality
category:
Gender equality

comments:
Necessary action was taken.
action_plan:
ILO Office for Turkey targetted women who willing to take part in labour market while developing project proposal and planing implementation of INT/17/03/UNW project but project partner which was responsible for outreach and determination of trainee lists had to also take into account vulnerability criteria to reach overall project's priority. That's why old women and single household head women who have the responsibility of bringing up their families also participated in basic skills and vocational trainings under the project. Even though this was the specific case for INT/17/03/UNW project, ILO Office for Turkey has reached to many young women via ILO's Refugee Response Programme in Turkey to support their access to labour market through various tools and programmes including on the job trainings, incentives for transition to fomality and language trainings.
management_response:
Completed
progress:
Achieved
admin_units:
ILO-Ankara
title:
Revising the targeting of the training program may be important for enhancing effectiveness: Targeting of the program to younger women may create change in their perceptions and behaviour more easily than with older women who have established norms and behaviour in their daily lives. Targeting younger women with job prospects is likely to enhance the project’s success in reaching its goals in terms of increasing the employability of women and girls. Reaching women not looking for jobs takes away from the targeting efficiency of the program and reduces the impact of the program on women’s labour market transition.
project_symbols:
INT/17/03/UNW
url:
https://webapps.ilo.org/ievaldiscovery/recommendations/14789
information_source:
Country Office

Skip to top