IDN_2018_CCDP-IIAS_v01_M_v01_A_OCS
Coastal Community Development Project, IFAD Impact Assessment Surveys 2018
Name | Country code |
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Indonesia | IDN |
Other Household Survey [hh/oth]
IFAD's Coastal Community Development Project (CCDP) in Indonesia, a US$43.2 million project, had the overall goal of reducing poverty through enhanced, sustainable and replicable economic growth among the active poor in coastal and small island communities. This was to be achieved through investments in fishery, aquaculture, processing and marketing, in addition to provision of related support structures. To this end, the project aimed at addressing constraints on small-scale fishery communities by increasing fish catch, fish productivity and income through improvements in fishing gears (technology) used and fishing practices as well as increasing household participation in high-potential marine and aquaculture value chains. CCDP also aimed at rehabilitating coastal and natural resources to ensure sustainability of the environment, fish stock and economic livelihoods. The project was implemented in 181 villages within 12 districts throughout eastern Indonesia.
The CCDP was selected for rigorous ex-post impact assessment (IA) to analyze the effects of CCDP on a number of impact and outcome indicators, including economic mobility, food security and nutrition, resilience, women's empowerment and natural resources rehabilitation. For more information, please, click on the following link <https://www.ifad.org/en/web/knowledge/-/publication/impact-assessment-the-coastal-community-development-ccdp->.
Sample survey data [ssd]
Households
The survey covers the following topics:
The project was implemented in 181 villages within 12 districts throughout eastern Indonesia.
Name | Affiliation |
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International Fund for Agricultural Development | United Nations |
Name | Affiliation | Role |
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Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries | Government of Indonesia | Project executing agency |
The households that directly participated in the CCDP were termed beneficiaries or the "treatment" group, while households residing in the same villages as CCDP beneficiaries but did not directly participate in the CCDP were termed "spillover" group, as they were likely to indirectly benefit from some of the CCDP interventions, in one way or another. A separate "control" or comparison group of households was drawn from separate districts and villages, which had similar characteristics at baseline as those where CCDP was implemented. More detail on the sampling procedure is available in the IA plan and report attached in the documentation section.
A detailed household survey questionnaire was developed to collect primary data on the livelihood activities of the CCDP beneficiaries as well as the spillover and comparison group households. The questionnaire primarily captured data on fisheries and aquaculture activities of the households, characteristics of their fishing gears, fishing boats and technologies used by the fishers as well as the kinds of fish and quantities caught during the peak and low seasons. For aquaculture fishers, the questionnaire collected data on the aquaculture infrastructure used such as cages, rafts and nets, in addition to the types of inputs used such as fingerlings and fish feed. Data on labor use and how fishers organized their fishing/aquaculture activities, including whether they fished in groups or not and whether they sold their fish catch in groups or as individuals and where they sold their fish (whether fresh or after processing), etc. were all captured by the questionnaire.
Additional variables captured by the questionnaire include household-level variables such as income sources (including non-fishing activities), diet composition and food insecurity experiences. Variables on household assets, including productive assets (fishing assets, farming assets, etc.), housing assets, durable assets, savings, and access to credit were also collected through the questionnaire. As is standard with most household surveys, the questionnaire captured household demographic variables, including the ages, sex, education levels, ethnicity and religion of the individuals in the households interviewed. Variables designed to measure resilience to a variety of shocks as well as measure women's empowerment were also captured through the household survey questionnaire. In addition to the household survey questionnaire, a community-level survey questionnaire was designed and used to collect data on a number of community-level variables. This questionnaire captured variables such as the types of infrastructure and public services available in the communities, the various development projects implemented in the community, as well as variables on shocks that the communities experienced and the development and social groups operating in the communities. The community-level survey questionnaire allowed for the collection of important community-level variables useful for matching as well as for controlling for as part of data analysis.
Note: some variables may have missing labels. Please, refer to the questionnaire for more details.
Start | End |
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2018-05 | 2019-04 |
Is signing of a confidentiality declaration required? | Confidentiality declaration text |
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yes | The users shall not take any action with the purpose of identifying any individual entity (i.e. person, household, enterprise, etc.) in the micro dataset(s). If such a disclosure is made inadvertently, no use will be made of the information, and it will be reported immediately to FAO |
Micro datasets disseminated by FAO shall only be allowed for research and statistical purposes. Any user which requests access working for a commercial company will not be granted access to any micro dataset regardless of their specified purpose. Users requesting access to any datasets must agree to the following minimal conditions:
The user of the data acknowledges that the original collector of the data, the authorized distributor of the data, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.
DDI_IDN_2018_CCDP-IIAS_v01_M_v01_A_OCS
Name | Affiliation | Role |
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Office of Chief Statistician | Food and Agriculture Organization | Metadata producer |
Development Economics Data Group | The World Bank | Metadata adapted for World Bank Microdata Library |
2023-02-17
Version 01 (February 2023): This metadata was downloaded from the FAO website (https://microdata.fao.org/index.php/catalog) and it is identical to FAO version (IDN_2019_CCDP-IIAS_v01_EN_M_v01_A_OCS). The following two metadata fields were edited - Document ID and Survey ID.