ScholarGate
Asistent
Process / pipelineProgram evaluation methodology

Realist Evaluation

Realist evaluation is a theory-driven approach to evaluating programs and policies that asks not simply 'does it work?' but 'what works, for whom, in what circumstances, and why?'. Developed by Ray Pawson and Nick Tilley in their 1997 book Realistic Evaluation, it treats interventions as theories incarnate: programs offer resources or opportunities that trigger underlying mechanisms of reasoning and response in participants, and those mechanisms only fire in particular contexts. The unit of analysis is the Context-Mechanism-Outcome (CMO) configuration, and the goal is to build and refine middle-range theory that explains differential outcomes across settings.

Otvorite u MethodMindUskoroPrimijenite, usporedite, dobijte smjernice
Alati i resursi
Preuzmi prezentaciju
Učenje i istraživanje
VideoUskoro

Pročitajte cijelu metodu

Samo za članove

Prijavite se besplatnim računom kako biste pročitali ovaj odjeljak.

Prijavite se

Karta metoda

Okruženje srodnih metoda — odaberite čvor za istraživanje.

+1 više

Izvori

  1. Pawson, R., & Tilley, N. (1997). Realistic Evaluation. London: SAGE Publications. ISBN: 9780761950097
  2. Pawson, R. (2006). Evidence-Based Policy: A Realist Perspective. London: SAGE Publications. ISBN: 9781412910606

Kako citirati ovu stranicu

ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Realist Evaluation of Programs and Policies. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/hr/public-policy/realist-evaluation

Koja metoda?

Postavite ovu metodu uz njoj najsrodnije i pročitajte ih jednu uz drugu — knjižnica vam knjige stavlja na stol; izbor je na vama.

Usporedi jedno uz drugo

Citirana u

ScholarGateRealist Evaluation (Realist Evaluation of Programs and Policies). Preuzeto 2026-06-24 s https://scholargate.app/hr/public-policy/realist-evaluation · Skup podataka: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026