Population

A Measure of Success

A Measure of Success
Building Monitoring and Evaluation Capacity in Small, Community-Based Programs

International Center for Research on Women (ICRW)
2007

ICRW worked with three NGOs in India to plan and implement simple and affordable monitoring and evaluation approaches for their current and future adolescent reproductive health projects.

(2.23 MB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

Terms and Conditions »

Ravi Verma

Ravi Verma
Ravi
Verma
Regional Director, Asia Regional Office
Bio: 

Ravi Verma is regional director for the International Center for Research on Women's (ICRW) Asia Regional Office in New Delhi, India. In this role, Verma leads ICRW’s local and regional efforts to conduct research, provide technical support, build capacity and partake in policy dialogue on an array of issues, including adolescent girls, reproductive health, HIV/AIDS, gender-based violence, engaging men and boys and economic development.

Verma brings more than 25 years of programmatic research experience in reproductive health, gender mainstreaming and HIV in South Asia. Prior to joining ICRW in 2007, he was a program associate with Population Council/Horizons, where he collaborated with partners to design, implement and evaluate innovative operations research projects on gender and HIV. For more than 20 years, he was a professor in the department of population policies and programs at the International Institute for Population Sciences in Mumbai, India. While there, Verma managed multi-faceted, collaborative intervention research projects and conducted national studies on reproductive health, fertility, family planning and sexual behaviors.

Expertise: 

HIV and AIDS, Engaging Men and Boys, Population and Reproductive Health, Violence Against Women

Languages Spoken: 

English, Hindi, Marathi

Education: 

Verma holds a doctorate in social sciences from the Indian Institute of Technology and a master's in psychology from the University of Allahabad in India.

Exploring Women’s Reproductive Histories

Exploring Women’s Reproductive Histories
A Survey Instrument

International Center for Research on Women
2002

Understanding what determines a woman’s reproductive choices and behaviors, particularly in terms of family planning, can inform the development of more effective programs and policies to improve their lives.   

With an aim to design better measurement tools for gathering data on the determinants of women’s reproductive behaviors, ICRW and partners implemented an innovative, large-scale, household-based study in Madhya Pradesh, India. Our survey approach was found to produce higher quality and more detailed data than standard household surveys. In particular, this approach appears to reduce the under-reporting of abortion, which has been legal in India since 1972, while also collecting information that allows for a more comprehensive exploration of the ways in which different factors in women’s lives intersect to shape their reproductive behavior.

This survey instrument combines a unique narrative interviewing technique with rigorous quantitative survey methodology that allows women to report on their reproductive lives within the context of a natural storytelling process.  The questionnaire’s structure, including both the types and sequencing of questions, was deliberately designed to mimic a conversational flow, which differentiates it from traditional survey approaches. Findings from the study are published in Realizing Reproductive Rights and Choice.

(1.27 MB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

Terms and Conditions »

Syndicate content