MEAL · Somalia · Localization

Localizing MEAL: Capacity Building for Somali MEAL Professionals

“The data we collect is only as strong as the people we invest in — and those people should be Somali.”

By a Somali MEAL Practitioner Monitoring, Evaluation & Learning 10 min read
70%+ of aid in Somalia delivered by international NGOs
~30% MEAL roles held by Somali professionals nationally
2030 Grand Bargain target for 25% local funding

Introduction: Who Owns Somalia’s Data?

Walk into any MEAL department of a major international NGO operating in Mogadishu, Baidoa, or Kismayo, and you are likely to find a familiar pattern: an international MEAL Manager at the top, supported by a handful of Somali data collectors and enumerators at the bottom. The middle — the analysis, the sense-making, the strategic learning — often remains in foreign hands.

This is not a criticism of individuals. It is a structural problem. And it has a name: the localization gap in MEAL. Somalia’s humanitarian and development landscape is one of the most complex in the world, shaped by decades of conflict, displacement, clan dynamics, linguistic diversity, and a resilient population that understands its own context far better than any expatriate ever could. Yet the systems we use to monitor programs, evaluate impact, and drive learning are largely designed, led, and interpreted by outsiders.

This blog post argues that localizing MEAL is not just a feel-good agenda — it is a technical and strategic imperative for better programs, better data, and better outcomes for Somali communities.

“Localization is not about replacing international staff with local staff doing the same thing. It is about building an entirely different system — one rooted in Somali knowledge, values, and leadership.”

The Current State: What Are We Getting Wrong?

Despite years of localization rhetoric — reinforced by the Grand Bargain commitments signed in 2016 — Somali MEAL professionals remain systematically undervalued and underutilized. The problems are structural, cultural, and institutional.

📚 Limited Formal Training
Very few universities in Somalia offer dedicated M&E or MEAL courses aligned with humanitarian standards.
👥 Glass Ceiling in Organizations
Somali staff are recruited as enumerators but rarely promoted to senior MEAL roles or evaluation leads.
📊 Tools Built for Outsiders
Frameworks, log frames, and ToC templates are often imported directly without contextual adaptation.
💰 Funding Gaps
Capacity building for local MEAL staff is often the first budget line cut when funding gets tight.
🌐 Language Barriers
Most MEAL tools, reports, and platforms are in English, excluding Somali-speaking staff from full participation.
🔄 High Staff Turnover
Institutional MEAL knowledge walks out the door repeatedly and is rarely captured or transferred systematically.

Why It Matters: The Case for Somali-Led MEAL

Somali MEAL professionals bring something that no international consultant can replicate: contextual intelligence. They understand the nuance of how a Somali woman in a displacement camp might respond to a sensitive question, or why a focus group in a particular district might give socially desirable rather than honest answers. They know which clan elders to engage, which questions are considered taboo, and how to navigate the informal power structures that shape community dynamics.

Beyond cultural competency, there is a sustainability argument. Somalia will not always have a large international humanitarian presence. The programs, evaluations, and learning systems built today should be owned and managed by Somalis — not handed over in a rushed “exit strategy” that leaves no real capacity behind.

“When a Somali evaluator leads a focus group in their own language, in their own community, the quality of data is categorically different. The stories that emerge are richer, more honest, and more actionable.”

Five Pillars of MEAL Capacity Building in Somalia

Effective localization of MEAL is not just about training. It requires a multi-layered approach that addresses skills, systems, culture, and incentives simultaneously.

  • Invest in Formal and Non-Formal Education
    Partner with Somali universities — such as SIMAD, Mogadishu University, and University of Hargeisa — to develop accredited M&E curricula. Complement this with short-course certifications, online learning platforms accessible in Somali, and structured on-the-job mentorship programs run by senior MEAL staff.
  • Build Somali-Led MEAL Networks and Communities of Practice
    Create dedicated platforms where Somali MEAL professionals can share tools, discuss methodology challenges, and collaborate on evaluation design. Regional hubs in Mogadishu, Garowe, and Hargeisa can anchor peer learning networks that reduce isolation and build collective expertise.
  • Adapt Tools and Frameworks to the Somali Context
    Stop importing log frames and indicator libraries wholesale. Work with Somali MEAL professionals to co-design context-sensitive frameworks that reflect local theories of change, use indicators that communities understand, and include qualitative approaches that capture what quantitative data misses in conflict-affected settings.
  • Create Deliberate Pathways for Career Progression
    INGOs and UN agencies must move beyond tokenism. Somali MEAL staff should be mentored for senior roles, lead evaluations, and manage international teams where appropriate. Job descriptions should be redesigned to remove unnecessary barriers — such as requiring degrees from Western institutions.
  • Prioritize Knowledge Management and Institutional Memory
    Build organizational systems — learning repositories, after-action review processes, documented SOPs in Somali and English — that capture the expertise of Somali MEAL professionals regardless of staff turnover. This protects the institutional investment and accelerates the learning of new staff.

What Good Looks Like: Emerging Bright Spots

Localization progress is uneven, but there are encouraging developments worth acknowledging and scaling.

Several Somali NGOs — including local organizations working in the education and WASH sectors — have developed their own internal MEAL systems without relying on international templates. These systems are leaner, more community-facing, and are increasingly winning the confidence of donors who recognize their contextual validity.

The Somalia NGO Consortium has at various points championed localization working groups that bring together national and international actors to co-develop capacity building strategies. The challenge has been sustaining momentum when donor priorities shift or key champions leave.

Digital tools like KoBoToolbox are increasingly being used by Somali-led organizations — not just as data collection platforms, but for analysis dashboards and real-time program management. When Somali staff are trained not just to operate these tools but to own them, the results are transformative.

Recommendations: A Call to Action

Localization of MEAL in Somalia requires intentional action from all stakeholders — donors, INGOs, local NGOs, academic institutions, and Somali MEAL professionals themselves.

🏢 Donors
Ring-fence funding for local MEAL capacity building. Reward grantees who demonstrate genuine localization progress in MEAL leadership.
🌐 INGOs
Set measurable targets for Somali MEAL professionals in senior roles. Make mentorship structural, not optional.
❤ Local NGOs
Demand equal standing in evaluation design, not just data collection. Document and share your MEAL models.
🏫 Universities
Develop practical, applied MEAL curricula. Partner with NGOs for field placements and real-data capstone projects.
👤 MEAL Professionals
Pursue professional development actively. Build peer networks. Document your methodology innovations and publish them.

Conclusion: Somalia Deserves Somali-Led Evidence

Localization of MEAL is not a charitable gesture — it is a prerequisite for programs that genuinely respond to Somali realities. The capacity, intelligence, and commitment are already present within Somalia’s growing professional class. What is needed is the structural investment, the institutional will, and the humility from international actors to step back and make space. When Somali MEAL professionals lead the monitoring, lead the evaluations, and drive the learning, Somali communities will finally have evidence systems that truly serve them — not the reporting needs of distant donors. That is what accountable, locally-owned development looks like. And Somalia is ready for it.

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