The role of Supreme Audit Institutions in propelling the attainment of Agenda 2030: Lessons from Uganda by Josephine Waters

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The role of Supreme Audit Institutions in propelling the attainment of Agenda 2030: Lessons from Uganda by Josephine Waters

Josephine is a Credentialed Evaluator with seventeen years working experience in research and evaluation. She is an Assistant Director, Research Services and past Head of the Monitoring and Evaluation Division in the Parliament of Uganda. She supported initial processes for the development of guidance for responsible evaluation for the Independent Evaluation Group (IEG). In 2021, she led the development of the African Evaluation Principles by the Africa Evaluation Association (AfrEA). 

She is a member of the Independent Evaluation Panel of the Global Fund, the Canadian Evaluation Society Ethics Working Group, and the National Monitoring and Evaluation Technical Working Group. She is a former Board Member of the International Development Evaluation Association (IDEAS) representing Sub-Saharan Africa. Josephine is a Council Member of the International Evaluation Academy and the Vice President of the Uganda Evaluation Association.

Josephine has mentored several Young and Emerging Evaluators under the Africa Evidence Youth League of the African Evidence Network, EvalPartners and Search for Common Ground Global Mentorship Programmes. 

In 2023, Josephine received the African Evidence Leadership Award-Evidence User Category by the African Evidence Network and her Credentialed Evaluator designation by the Canadian Evaluation Society. In 2017, she was recognized by the American Evaluation Association as the most promising evaluator from developing countries. 

Josephine is a PhD candidate in Programme Evaluation at the University of Cape Town. Click here to view the presentation.

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Juliana Nakiwanda

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