Mid-term evaluation
Canada's Strategy to Prevent and Address Gender-Based Violence

Mid-term evaluation: Canada's Strategy to Prevent and Address Gender-Based Violence

It’s Time: Canada Strategy to Prevent and Address Gender-Based Violence (the GBV Strategy) is the Government of Canada’s response to Gender-Based Violence (GBV), it was created in 2017-2018 and was expanded in 2018-2019 with funding from Budget 2018.

Program overview

The GBV Strategy is a collection of 18 activities organized into three pillars:

  1. Preventing GBV
  2. Supporting survivors and their families
  3. Promoting responsive legal and justice systems

Budgets 2017 and 2018 provided nearly $220 million starting in 2017-2018 until 2022-2023, and $42.7 million of ongoing annual funding, to establish, launch, and expand the GBV Strategy. Six leading federal departments and agenciesFootnote 1  received funding for specific activities:

Evaluation overview

This mid-term evaluation focused on the period from fiscal years 2017-18 to 2020-21. It also informs the implementation of the 10-year National Action Plan to End Gender-Based Violence (NAP to End GBV). The scope of the evaluation included all activities planned or implemented under the GBV Strategy. The objectives of the evaluation were to:

  • examine issues of program design (specifically governance)
  • deliver progress toward short-term outcomes
  • identify recommendations for possible improvements

Key findings

The evaluation assessed the appropriateness of the GBV Strategy’s design in terms of scope, partnerships, and the suitability of allocated funding; its governance structures; delivery of funded initiatives; and, progress towards results.

Design

Governance

Implementation

Progress towards short-term outcomes

Recommendations

The following recommendations are directed to WAGE, in collaboration with applicable federal partners. While some of the recommendations will require consultation and coordination with other federal partners, WAGE is the lead department for all recommendations.

  1. Improve and strengthen the current federal vision for preventing and addressing GBV through the creation and strengthening of governance structures.
  2. Review and improve the existing logic model and performance measurement framework, including streamlining and adapting tools for data collection to the context of each partner department and agency.
  3. Better define the scope and role of the GBV Knowledge Centre with a view to maximizing its efficiency and the extent to which it can amplify the work undertaken through the GBV Strategy.

Management response and action plan

WAGE ensures the overall coordination reporting and is the only federal department that will need to develop a management response and action plan.

  1. WAGE will improve coordination and governance structures, ensuring alignment within WAGE, with federal partners, and with new partners. This will include:
    • Updating Terms of Reference for interdepartmental committees
    • Regular discussions with partners
    • Annual work priorities
    • Improving monitoring, impact assessment, and linkages
    • Stakeholder engagement
  2. WAGE will work with federal partners to improve existing performance measurement system. This will include:
    • Developing a Theory of Change that reflects GBV Strategy objectives, and aligns with the NAP to End GBV
    • Revising the performance measurement framework (PMF)
    • Designing / launching data collection tools, facilitate monitoring and progress reporting
  3. WAGE’s GBV Branch work collaboratively to foster an improved GBV knowledge and awareness environment. This will include:
    • Developing a GBV strategic plan for the GBV Knowledge Centre, that includes horizontal linkages and considerations

Learn more about gender-based violence

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