IPA Embedded Evidence Labs Program to Host Latin America Learning Exchange in Peru

IPA Embedded Evidence Labs Program to Host Latin America Learning Exchange in Peru

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The IPA Embedded Evidence Labs Program was first established in Peru in 2014, helping the Ministry of Education to harness the power of data and evidence to address their policy challenges. Since then, the program has expanded across the globe, and now supports 24 labs across 16 countries and 8 sectors, including environment, gender, crime, finance, education, social protection, health, and employment. But this December, the Embedded Lab program returns to its roots with the Latin America Learning Exchange, bringing together Lab teams and government counterparts from across Latin America to Lima, Peru.

The two-day session will bring together IPA teams, government officials, and technical experts for a series of presentations, trainings, working sessions, and group discussions on how to improve government use of evidence and data across the region. Through these sessions, teams from Colombia, Mexico, and Peru will identify the key opportunities and challenges related to data-driven policymaking in Latin America. For example, we will review how Labs generate impact using different research and learning strategies, and how the systems they are embedded in change. We will also explore areas for improvement and innovation for the Labs in order to increase their impact. Finally, there will be a space to make connections and create a network of Labs in Latin America in order to continue learning together. The discussions will highlight key insights and learnings from Embedded Lab implementation in the region, and generate a learning agenda to help guide the further refinement of the Embedded Labs model going forward.

The event will draw on the successes of previous learning exchanges—Ghana in 2019, Rwanda in 2022, and earlier this year in Uganda. However, while these past events were primarily focused on the education sector, this upcoming exchange will cover a diverse range of sectors, including environment, gender, education, social protection, crime & security, and financial inclusion, representing a broad set of challenges facing policymakers in the region. It is also unique in its focus on the Latin American region, which faces distinct contextual challenges related to policymaking processes and data collection and analysis capabilities. Insights from these sessions will be synthesized for dissemination amongst relevant stakeholders in the region.