Scholarship Criteria
TARGET AUDIENCE
IPDET scholarships target actors with potential catalytic effect within developing countries, including government officials, parliamentarians, evaluation practitioners, managers, young evaluation professionals, members of Voluntary Organizations for Professional Evaluation (VOPEs), and students. Through this targeting, the scholarships enable individuals who would not otherwise have the means to access the IPDET program.
MANDATORY CRITERIA
In order to be eligible for a scholarship, the applicant:
- must be a national and resident of a low-income, lower-middle income or upper-middle-income country (see the country lists below*)
- has no other funding available to finance the tuition fee
Priority Criteria
An applicant will be considered on a priority basis if he/she is:
- conducting, managing, commissioning and/or using evaluations;
- holding a position of influence that is likely to foster wider adoption of M&E practices;
- working in an organization with a long-term plan to build evaluation capacity, where the IPDET training is an integral part of a more comprehensive plan;
- generating impact within the M&E sector of the developing country where he/she is based after participating in a workshop.
Important notice
- Be aware, that you cannot apply for an online and on-site scholarship at the same time! Choose beforehand, for which scholarship you want to apply.
- We kindly urge only those applicants in real need of financial support to apply for a scholarship, since the demand outnumbers the funds available.
Responsibilities
- Scholarship recipients are responsible for ensuring that they provide all required information within the stipulated time frame and that all information is correct and accurate, to the best of their knowledge. Scholarship recipients are also responsible for sharing post-workshop information (i.e., sharing a qualitative letter and filling out a quantitative survey).
*As reference, we use the World Bank Country and Lending Groups list.
LOW-INCOME ECONOMIES
Afghanistan | Guinea-Bissau | Somalia |
Burkina Faso | Korea, Dem. People’s Rep. | South Sudan |
Burundi | Liberia | Sudan |
Central African Republic | Madagascar | Syrian Arab Republic |
Chad | Malawi | Togo |
Congo, Dem. Rep | Mali | Uganda |
Eritrea | Mozambique | Yemen, Rep. |
Ethiopia | Niger | Zambia |
Gambia, The | Rwanda | |
Guinea | Sierra Leone |
LOWER-MIDDLE INCOME ECONOMIES
Angola | India | Philippines |
Algeria | Indonesia | Samoa |
Bangladesh | Iran, Islamic Rep | São Tomé and Principe |
Benin | Kenya | Senegal |
Bhutan | Kiribati | Solomon Islands |
Bolivia | Kyrgyz Republic | Sri Lanka |
Cabo Verde | Lao PDR | Tanzania |
Cambodia | Lebanon | Tajikistan |
Cameroon | Lesotho | Timor-Leste |
Comoros | Mauritania | Tunisia |
Congo, Rep. | Micronesia, Fed. Sts. | Ukraine |
Côte d’Ivoire | Mongolia | Uzbekistan |
Djibouti | Morocco | Vanuatu |
Egypt, Arab Rep. | Myanmar | Vietnam |
El Salvador | Nepal | West Bank and Gaza |
Eswatini | Nicaragua | Zimbabwe |
Ghana | Nigeria | |
Haiti | Pakistan | |
Honduras | Papua New Guinea |
UPPER-MIDDLE-INCOME ECONOMIES
Albania | Fiji | Namibia |
American Samoa | Gabon | North Macedonia |
Argentina | Georgia | Palau |
Armenia | Grenada | Paraguay |
Azerbaijan | Guatemala | Peru |
Belarus | Guyana | Russian Federation |
Belize | Iraq | Serbia |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | Jamaica | South Africa |
Botswana | Jordan | St. Lucia |
Brazil | Kazakhstan | St. Vincent and the Grenadines |
Bulgaria | Kosovo | Suriname |
China | Libya | Thailand |
Colombia | Malaysia | Tonga |
Costa Rica | Maldives | Turkey |
Cuba | Marshall Islands | Turkmenistan |
Dominica | Mauritius | Tuvalu |
Dominican Republic | Mexico | |
Equatorial Guinea | Moldova | |
Ecuador | Montenegro |