According toImpact evaluation the UN Secretary-General, SDG 10 remains the least-performing SDG. Action on this goal has therefore never been more urgent. Addressing this urgency is critical, as continued inequalityInequality causes global unemployment, health, and environmental issues. In MalaysiaMalaysia, there is increasing concern over the sustainable livelihoodSustainable livelihood, economic growth, and social stability of those working in informal job sectors, making them vulnerable to increased social inequalitiesSocial inequality. Such forms of inequalityInequality create disparities in the distribution of wealth, access to opportunities, and potential societal biases. In 2020, the All-Party Parliamentary Group MalaysiaMalaysia on the Sustainable Development GoalsSustainable development goals (APPGM-SDGAPPGM-SDG Malaysia) launched solution projects to improve the livelihoodLivelihood of the B40 communitiesB40 communities. Impact evaluationsImpact evaluation are vital to assess the effectiveness and impact of interventions. In 2022, an evaluationEvaluation team examined the implications of these solution projects across parliamentary constituencies in the Central Malaysian region of Selangor, Kuala Lumpur, and Pahang. Using document analysis, focus group discussions, and site visits, the team identified the impact evaluationImpact evaluation using the deep, clear, wide, high, SDGs, and genderGender domains. A report on the impact evaluationImpact evaluation of SDG efforts, psychological effects, and the efficiency of the projects was written. Using the SDG 10: Reduced InequalitiesInequality framework and Theory of ChangeTheory of Change, this chapter discusses how social interventionsSocial intervention reduce income inequalitiesInequality, their impacts, and the challenges beneficiaries face.

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From the Local to Global: Impact Evaluation on SDG Solution Projects in Malaysia

  • Raan Hann Tan,
  • Yuen Beng Lee,
  • Nurul Hidayat Ab Rahman,
  • Maslisa Zainuddin

摘要

According toImpact evaluation the UN Secretary-General, SDG 10 remains the least-performing SDG. Action on this goal has therefore never been more urgent. Addressing this urgency is critical, as continued inequalityInequality causes global unemployment, health, and environmental issues. In MalaysiaMalaysia, there is increasing concern over the sustainable livelihoodSustainable livelihood, economic growth, and social stability of those working in informal job sectors, making them vulnerable to increased social inequalitiesSocial inequality. Such forms of inequalityInequality create disparities in the distribution of wealth, access to opportunities, and potential societal biases. In 2020, the All-Party Parliamentary Group MalaysiaMalaysia on the Sustainable Development GoalsSustainable development goals (APPGM-SDGAPPGM-SDG Malaysia) launched solution projects to improve the livelihoodLivelihood of the B40 communitiesB40 communities. Impact evaluationsImpact evaluation are vital to assess the effectiveness and impact of interventions. In 2022, an evaluationEvaluation team examined the implications of these solution projects across parliamentary constituencies in the Central Malaysian region of Selangor, Kuala Lumpur, and Pahang. Using document analysis, focus group discussions, and site visits, the team identified the impact evaluationImpact evaluation using the deep, clear, wide, high, SDGs, and genderGender domains. A report on the impact evaluationImpact evaluation of SDG efforts, psychological effects, and the efficiency of the projects was written. Using the SDG 10: Reduced InequalitiesInequality framework and Theory of ChangeTheory of Change, this chapter discusses how social interventionsSocial intervention reduce income inequalitiesInequality, their impacts, and the challenges beneficiaries face.