Our Approach and History

    Our Approach to Development

    Reducing poverty and spurring growth in developing countries requires strategic, high-value investment of scarce resources, whether they come from donors, governments, or communities. Interventions to reduce the burden of poverty need to be rigorously identified, tested, and scaled up to be cost-effective and have high impact.

    Evidence Action develops and de-risks models for such interventions that allow tens of millions of people to be served and return on investment be measured.

    We bridge the gap between rigorous research and pilot interventions on one hand, and institutionalized programs on the other. By focusing on promising approaches backed by rigorous evidence, we support programs that are measurably effective; by seeking to solve the challenge of scale, we provide cost-effective impact for many.

    Our History

    Evidence Action launched formally in 2013 to scale up poverty interventions that have been proven to be effective in order to benefit millions of people.

    Evidence Action leads and manages two programs incubated initially by Innovations for Poverty Action: Dispensers for Safe Water and the Deworm the World Initiative. While Evidence Action grew out of a need to manage these programs, the larger goal of the organization was to design a process to bridge the gap between proven interventions that work and scaling them up to produce measurable impact for millions of people.

    This led to the creation of Evidence Action Beta in 2014, which sought to test other rigorously-evaluated interventions to be implemented as sustainable programs at scale. Beta tested interventions including No Lean Season, Winning Start, and No Sugar, including conducting randomized controlled trials on programs to determine their suitability for further scaling. 

    In 2019, our Accelerator replaced Evidence Action Beta, maintaining the emphasis on robust evidence, cost-effectiveness, and impact at scale and prioritizing ready-to-scale interventions that leverage our capabilities in scaled delivery, in particular of health-related programs. The Accelerator employs a program development process designed for rapid scaling and identification of the next generation of flagship programs. 

    Evidence Action values iteration, evaluation, learning, and adapting. We envision our role as leading a strategic approach to development that fills the gap between “what works” and implementing interventions at scale. By both incubating these proven interventions and also providing technical support and other functional services to our fully scaled programs, we span the continuum of evidence-based development that allows us to lay the foundations for effective monitoring and evaluation from the beginning. By strategically partnering, collaborating, and working with researchers, community members, institutions, and governments, we are looking to build a world where millions of people living in the poorest places have better opportunities and their lives are measurably improved.

    Who We Are

    Evidence Action today

    Evidence Action is dedicated to improving the lives of millions of people across Africa and Asia. Our approach fills the gap between research about “what works” and implementing solutions for people in need. We operate in six countries across the globe and positively impact hundreds of millions of lives every year in a measurable way by delivering our evidence-based interventions where the need and opportunity are greatest.

    We provide services to the most vulnerable people in these countries irrespective of their race, religion, gender, or political affiliation. Some of the countries where we operate are representative democracies while others are not. Our operations in a given country in no way reflects an endorsement of that country’s form of government, and we continuously evaluate the political situation wherever we operate.

    Evidence Action’s programs in India are implemented through a partnership with EAII Advisors Pvt. Ltd, a for-profit private limited company registered in India.

     

    What makes Evidence Action unique is our process: we spend much of our energy identifying evidence-based interventions, pressure-testing them for scalable feasibility, and designing them to serve millions. We identify innovative, appropriate financing mechanisms and build best practice operational models. We voraciously self-evaluate, learn, and improve our models for scaling with a commitment to transparency on progress, impact, and value for money.

    We lead with our values, putting evidence first. By going where the evidence leads us, it allows our decision making process–how we choose which innovations to scale up and how to constantly evaluate them–to produce programs that have the largest impact for investment.

    Our Vision, Mission, and Values

    Vision

    Building a world where hundreds of millions of people in the poorest places have better opportunities and their lives are measurably improved.

    Mission

    Evidence Action aims to be a world leader in scaling evidence-based and cost-effective programs to reduce the burden of poverty.

    Values

    Evidence first. We are led by the facts. We go where the data takes us. Robust, rigorous evidence informs our choices and decisions.

    Think big, act urgently. We are unrelenting in our pursuit of results at scale. We know that poverty does not wait. We act so that the best ideas deliver benefit to millions.

    Iterate, again. We reflect constantly and adapt accordingly. We test, measure, and improve to ensure impact. If we can do something, we can do it better.

    Economize without compromise. The biggest impact at the lowest cost is what we are after. We ensure value for money for all our stakeholders, but know there is no substitute for quality.

    Challenge convention. We ask “why” and “why not” in equal measure. We are sincere in our skepticism and incessant in our search for solutions.

    Passion throughout. We are driven to lessen inequality, to improve lives. We take action, converting impatience into impact.

     

    Our Board and Advisors

    Evidence Action is grateful for the leadership and counsel of our Board of Directors and Advisors. They lead us to live up to our organizational values of rigor, evidence, and action. We greatly appreciate the considerable commitment and time that they contribute.

    Board of Directors

    SHIKHAR GHOSH
    Chair of the Board, EVIDENCE ACTION

    Professor of Management Practice, HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL

    Shikhar Ghosh is currently a Professor of Management Practice at Harvard Business School. Ghosh has been a successful entrepreneur for the last 20 years. He was the founder and CEO or Chairman of eight technology-based entrepreneurial companies and was the past Chairman of the Massachusetts Technology Leadership Council and The Indus Entrepreneurs. He was selected by Business Week as one of the best Entrepreneurs in the US, by Forbes as one of the ‘Masters of the Internet Universe’, and by Fortune as the CEO of one of the 10 most innovative companies in the US.

    AMRITA AHUJA

    DOUGLAS B. MARSHALL, JR. FAMILY FOUNDATION

    Amrita Ahuja is a founder of Evidence Action. An accidental social-entrepreneur, she led the the start-up of Dispensers for Safe Water, and chaired the board of Deworm the World as it grew to reach 30 million children. She leads the Douglas B. Marshall, Jr. Family Foundation, an innovative funder of international education. Ahuja also worked as a management consultant for the Monitor Group where she led projects to evaluate market-based approaches to delivering products and services to the poor. There she developed consumer marketing strategies, distribution models, and best practices for health and other products. Ahuja brings experience in marketing and distribution of consumer goods in the public and private sectors in India and Africa as well as significant experience with innovation and evidence in international development.  She holds a Ph.D. in Business Economics from Harvard University.

    KANIKA BAHL
    Chief Executive Officer, EVIDENCE ACTION

    Kanika Bahl is CEO of Evidence Action where she has been on the Board since 2015.  Previously she served as Managing Director at Results for Development (R4D), where she established and led the Market Dynamics practice. The practice has increased access to products such as childhood pneumonia treatments and malaria bed nets for millions of individuals in Africa and Asia. It achieves this by aligning the interests of manufacturers, donors, and country governments to develop and execute healthcare solutions for under-served markets at scale. Bahl is on the Board of TechnoServe and previously acted as Market-Shaping Co-Chair for the UN Commission on Life Saving Commodities. Prior to R4D, Bahl served as an Executive Vice President at the Clinton Foundation Health Access Initiative (CHAI). Bahl received her MBA from the Stanford Graduate School of Business and her BA in Mathematical Economics from Rice University.

    JOHN B. GIANOLA, CPA, CGMA 

    John Gianola is a retired partner from Ernst & Young, one of the leading global accounting firms. During his 38 year career, 27 as an audit partner, he had supervisory responsibility for engagements involving accounting and auditing for a variety of industries including banking, insurance, energy, mining, manufacturing, technology, not for profit and governmental entities. Gianola’s clients were both publicly and privately owned, ranging in size from small entities to multi-national Fortune 500 companies with subsidiaries operating in multiple jurisdictions around the world. Gianola led continuing education courses for Ernst & Young executives, was a guest lecturer in college classrooms, and served as an adjunct professor of accounting at West Virginia University. Gianola is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, the West Virginia Society of Certified Public Accountants, the Board of Advisors of The College of Business and Economics at West Virginia University, and the West Virginia University Foundation.

    DINA POMERANZ
    Assistant Professor, UNIVERSITY OF ZURICH

    Dina Pomeranz is an expert on impact evaluations and studies public policies in developing countries, with a particular focus on taxation and public procurement. She is an affiliate professor at the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL), the Bureau for Research and Economic Analysis of Development (BREAD) and the Center for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), a non-resident fellow at the Center for Global Development (CGD) and a member of the International Growth Centre (IGC). In 2018, she was elected to the Council of the European Economic Association for a 5-year term. Besides her academic interests, she serves on the boards and advisory boards of a number of social enterprise ventures committed to translating research into practice.

    CHRISTINA RIECHERS
    Payment Partnerships, SQUARE

    Christina Riechers is passionate about building innovative business models with social benefit. In her current role she makes commerce easier for small businesses at Square, the financial services and payments start-up. A co-founder of Evidence Action, Riechers was previously Evidence Action’s Director of Global Programs as well as Director of Business Development and Strategy. In these capacities, she was a key player in Evidence Action’s start-up phase, generating resources for the organization, creating a vision for growth, and establishing organizational systems. Prior, Riechers worked with d.light design to make solar lighting affordable to rural households in India. She was also a management consultant for Bain & Company where she advised clients on strategy and operations. Riechers has a MBA from MIT Sloan and MPA/International Development from Harvard Kennedy School.

    DR. OWENS WIWA
    Executive Vice President, CLINTON HEALTH ACCESS INITIATIVE

    Dr. Owens Wiwa is an Executive Vice President, Regional Director of West and Central Africa, and the Country Director in Nigeria for the Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI). He joined CHAI in 2007 where he heads the Nigeria office and plays a leadership role in health policy development and implementation at the Federal and State levels. From 1998 to 2007, Dr. Wiwa worked with the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto, designing and leading research projects that focused on infectious diseases (especially HIV), and community and mental health in Africa. Prior to CHAI, Dr. Wiwa worked extensively as a physician in rural Nigeria and as a human and environmental rights activist with organizations such as Sierra Club and Amnesty International. Dr. Wiwa has an MPH from Johns Hopkins University and an MB BCH from the University of Calabar.

    ELIZABETH YOUNG MCNALLY
    Executive Vice President, SCHMIDT FUTURES

    Elizabeth Young McNally serves as Executive Vice President of Schmidt Futures. She is responsible for bringing teams of people together to solve problems in science, technology, and shared prosperity. Previously, Young McNally was a Partner at McKinsey & Company and Global Partner Lead for McKinsey Academy. She was also a US Army Military Police officer, where she deployed twice to Iraq and served as General David Petraeus’s speechwriter. A graduate of West Point and Oxford, Young McNally is a Rhodes and Truman Scholar. She was appointed twice by President Obama to the US Military Academy Board of Visitors. The through lines of her career are a commitment to public service, a desire to empower individuals and teams to solve hard problems sustainably, and a deep belief that individuals and groups can cut down silos and collaborate for a higher purpose.

    Board of Advisors

    DAVID ADDISS

    David Addiss is Adjunct Professor in the Department of Global Health, Rollins School of Public Health. He is a senior scientist at the Task Force for Global Health and Adjunct Professor at the Eck Institute for Global Health, University of Notre Dame, where he teaches global health ethics. Addiss previously was Director of Children Without Worms, and a Senior Program Officer at the Science and Spirituality Program at the Fetzer Institute in Michigan where he was responsible for directing and planning Fetzer’s research program. Addiss spent 20 years at CDC where he conducted research on the prevention and control of parasitic diseases, with an emphasis on lymphatic filariasis and other neglected tropical diseases. He co-founded and co-directed the World Health Organization’s Collaborating Center for Control and Elimination of Lymphatic Filariasis in the Americas, based at CDC. Addiss received an M.D. from the Medical College of Georgia and an M.P.H. from Johns Hopkins University.

    STEFFANO BERTOZZI

    Steffano Bertozzi is Professor and Dean of the School of Public Health at the University of California at Berkeley. He has led impact evaluations of large, national health and social programs in Mexico as well as in Africa, Asia and Latin America. His research has covered a diverse range of projects in health economics and policy, focusing on the economic aspects of HIV/AIDS and on the health impact of large social programs. Bertozzi was previously the director of the HIV Global Health Program at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. He holds a Ph.D. in health policy and management from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and earned his medical degree at UC San Diego.

    STEPHEN LUBY

    Stephen Luby is Professor of Medicine in the Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine at Stanford University and Deputy Director for Research at the Center for Global Health Innovation. He previously served at the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Diseases Research, Bangladesh where he directed the Centre for Communicable Diseases exploring causes and prevention of diarrheal disease in settings where diarrhea is a leading cause of childhood death. Luby holds a medical degree from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School at Dallas. He studied epidemiology and preventive medicine at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    HARI MENON 

    Hari Menon is Country Director for India at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, where he works on policy, advocacy and government relations. Previously, Menon was the Deputy Director of India Country Office Programs for the Foundation where he supported a wide portfolio of work in public health in areas such as HIV prevention, and maternal and child health. Prior to joining the Gates Foundation, he served as strategic philanthropy adviser to Rohini Nilekani, a leading Indian philanthropist in areas including water & sanitation, environment conservation, education and governance & accountability. He holds an MBA in Marketing and Finance from XLRI, Jamshedpur, India.

    C.K. MISHRA

    C.K. Mishra is a highly distinguished career civil servant of the Indian Administrative Service (IAS), and retired in 2020 following 37 years of public service. He held numerous roles including Secretary, Ministry of Environment, Forest & Climate Change and Secretary, Ministry of Health & Family Welfare. He led the Indian negotiations at forums including the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Conference of the Parties. He has served as an administrator, policymaker, and public health strategist holding a wide range of assignments in the fields of health, education, industry and power. Mishra is recognized for his significant contributions to improving the Indian public health landscape, leading one of the largest public health programs globally. Through the National Health Mission, he drove implementation of ‘Mission Indradhanush’ – the largest ever focused campaign to immunize children. Mishra holds a Bachelor’s Degree from Delhi University and a Post Graduate Diploma in Media Law from NALSAR, Hyderabad, India.

    MUSHFIQ MOBARAK

    Mushfiq Mobarak is Associate Professor at Yale University with interests in environment and public finance issues. He has two main lines of research: (1) field experiments exploring ways to induce people in developing countries to adopt technologies or behaviors that are likely to be welfare improving, and (2) using field experiments and other methods to study the management of water resources and other infrastructure. He has experiments on migration, infrastructure (roads and electricity), water user associations, rainfall insurance, and environmental technologies (stoves, rainwater harvesting, conservation agriculture) ongoing in Bangladesh, India, Malawi, Nigeria and Uganda. Mobarak holds a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Maryland.

    SUSAN NAZZARO

    Susan Nazzaro is an access to medicines expert with experience across the not-for-profit and private sectors. She is currently the market access lead for early pipeline assets at Seagen, the industry leader in antibody-drug conjugates for treatment of cancer. There, she is developing the company’s strategy to ensure early pipeline clinical development plans maximize patient access. Previously, Susan led efforts to ensure access to essential health products for patients in low- and middle-income countries at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, including all new product introduction for the malaria team. She was also part of the team managing the foundation’s engagement with the Global Fund and served on the UNITAID Board from 2010-2016. She has served as an advisor at the World Bank and a Peace Corps volunteer in Madagascar. She holds an M.Sc. in Development Economics from the London School of Economics and a B.A. from Wellesley College.

    ERIK NIELSEN

    Erik Nielsen brings over twenty years of academic and professional experience at the nexus of governance, innovation, advocacy, and strategic partnership creation. Nielsen is currently the Portfolio Director of Nutrition Leverage for Influence and Transformation, Nutrition International’s global innovation fund that leverages greater collaboration and resources for improved nutrition in developing countries. Nielsen has worked with a variety of international development agencies including the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, Transparency International, EcoAgriculture Partners, and Global Affairs Canada. Erik has studied at Guelph, Cornell and Harvard universities and holds a doctorate focused on networked governance from MIT, where he was a Presidential Scholar. 

    HENK VAN STOKKOM

    Henk van Stokkom is a long-time entrepreneur and philanthropic advisor. He currently guides foundations and families in structuring and implementing charitable investments. Previously, he was the managing director of an investment company active on the Dutch stock exchange. Van Stokkom has worked for a number of companies such as Salomon Smith Barney Netherlands where he was involved in launching investment products (Managed Futures, Socially Responsible Investment, Emerging Market Debt & Private Equity/Venture Capital) for institutional investors, and has held positions as financial director for the De Waal Foundation and Hemar BV. For the De Waal Foundation, he was active in Latin America where the foundation was (co-) financing projects for children with disabilities. Van Stokkom has served on the boards of several charitable organizations including as chairman of Stichting Beheer Oikocredit Nederland Fonds (2002 -2006), a Dutch investment fund for micro credit.

    Our People

    Global Leadership Team

    Kanika Bahl, Chief Executive Officer

    Paul Byatta, Senior Director, Africa Region

    John de Wet, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

    Jeff Grosz, Senior Director, Accelerator

    Grace Hollister, Chief Engagement Officer 

    Brett Sedgewick, Senior Director, Programs

    Anil Tambay, Country Director, India (EAII Advisors)

    EVIDENCE-Portraits-April-2018-Kanika-Outdoor-FINAL-v1 (1)

    Kanika Bahl, Chief Executive Officer
    Kanika is CEO of Evidence Action where she has been on the Board since 2015. Previously she served as Managing Director at Results for Development (R4D), where she established and led the Market Dynamics practice. The practice has increased access to products such as childhood pneumonia treatments and malaria bed nets for millions of individuals in Africa and Asia. It achieves this by aligning the interests of manufacturers, donors, and country governments to develop and execute healthcare solutions for under-served markets at scale. Kanika is on the Board of TechnoServe and previously acted as Market-Shaping Co-Chair for the UN Commission on Life Saving Commodities. Prior to R4D, Kanika served as an Executive Vice President at the Clinton Foundation Health Access Initiative (CHAI). Kanika received her MBA from the Stanford Graduate School of Business and her BA in Mathematical Economics from Rice University.

    EVIDENCE-Portraits-April-2018-Paul-Outdoor-FINAL-v1

    Paul Byatta: Director, Africa Region
    Paul leads the development and execution of Evidence Action’s regional strategy for Africa, and provides day-to-day operations and managerial oversight for Dispensers for Safe Water and the regional programs of the Deworm the World Initiative, which cumulatively reach over 10 million people in Africa. Paul also oversees partner and policy engagement in the region. Paul previously served as Evidence Action’s Associate Director for Monitoring, Learning & Information Systems (MLIS) in the Africa region, leading a team of nearly 70 staff across Kenya, Uganda, and Malawi in developing robust monitoring and evaluation systems and ensuring data innovation and effective data communication to support program delivery. Paul has served in a variety of roles within Evidence Action and previously worked for Innovations for Poverty Action. Paul holds a bachelor's degree in economics from Harvard University.

    EVIDENCE-Portraits-April-2018-John-Outdoor-FINAL-v1

    John de Wet: Chief Financial and Administrative Officer
    John leads overall financial and operational management at Evidence Action. He oversees the diverse, global team that builds and maintains the organizational infrastructure which enables Evidence Action to execute its dynamic and impactful work. John has over two decades of relevant experience across the non-profit, public and corporate sectors. He has previously held multiple, senior leadership roles in a range of international organizations including BirdLife International, Arabella Advisors, and Conservation International. John is a certified accountant and an international associate member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. He holds a master’s degree in environment and development, and a Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Cape Town.

    Jeff Grosz Photo

    Jeff Grosz: Senior Director, Accelerator
    Jeff leads Accelerator, Evidence Action’s new program development division, which seeks to build the next generation of cost-effective programs that are ready for scale-up. Prior to joining Evidence Action, Jeff worked as Director of the Global Cancer Program at the Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI). He helped launch CHAI’s cancer program in 2015, applying CHAI’s market-shaping approach to expand access to quality, affordable cancer treatment. From 2010-2015, he served as the Country Director of CHAI’s Uganda office, overseeing a team of 45 to provide technical assistance and analytical support to the Ministry of Health. Prior to CHAI, Jeff worked in strategy roles with a U.S.-focused social services foundation and a political consultancy. He holds a BA in Philosophy from the University of Pennsylvania and an MBA from Yale University.

    EVIDENCE-Portraits-April-2018-Grace-Outdoor-FINAL-v1

    Grace Hollister: Chief Engagement Officer
    Grace leads Evidence Action's external relations team, overseeing global communications and fundraising, including the execution of Evidence Action’s thought leadership and brand building agenda, and the cultivation and management of donor relationships. From 2013-2020, Grace led Evidence Action's Deworm the World Initiative, overseeing an eight-fold increase in program reach to provide deworming treatment to over 270 million children annually. A founding member of Evidence Action, Grace previously worked at Innovations for Poverty Action and with the United States Government’s Millennium Challenge Corporation. Grace holds a bachelor’s degree in international relations and French from Tufts University.

    EVIDENCE-Portraits-April-2018-Grace-Outdoor-FINAL-v1

    Brett Sedgewick: Senior Director, Programs
    Brett leads the Programs team, which provides global strategy, technical leadership and support to Dispensers for Safe Water, the Deworm the World Initiative and the Monitoring, Learning, Evaluation Strategy team. Previously, Brett served as Director of the Deworm the World Initiative at Evidence Action, which supported governments to treat over 275 million children in 2019. Earlier in his career, Brett worked with Global Communities on technical leadership and fundraising, Chemonics International implementing USAID-funded agribusiness projects in Afghanistan and at the World Bank developing large-scale infrastructure interventions in China and Mongolia. In 2015, he was recognized by President Obama for his contributions to the Ebola efforts in Liberia. Brett holds a bachelor’s degree from Princeton University.

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    Deworm the World Initiative

    Anam Abdulla, Senior Manager

    Ima Chima, Country Director, Nigeria

    Jane Hagemann, Senior Manager

    Kate McCracken, Associate Director

    Dr. Mark Minnery, Lead Epidemiologist

    Chrispin Owaga, Associate Director, Kenya

     

    Dispensers for Safe Water

    Moses Baraza, Associate Director, Kenya

    Jennifer Comer, Senior Manager

    Richard Kibuuka, Country Manager, Uganda

    Andrew Ocama, Senior Manager, Carbon

     

    Accelerator

    Rebekah Chang, Associate Director, Iron and Folic Acid

    Emilie Efronson, Country Manager, Liberia

    Kevin Kelsey, Senior Manager, Analytics & Project Implementation

    Anna Konstantinova, Senior Manager, Maternal Syphilis

    Palesa Hanc, Senior Manager, Finance & Operations

     

    Monitoring, Learning, and Evaluation (MLE)

    Natalie Duarte, Associate Director, MLE Strategy

    Andrew Kitchel, Senior Manager, MLE Strategy

    Geofrey Oduwo, Senior Manager, MLE Delivery

     

    Africa 

    Leann Bankoski, Senior Manager, Global Project Operations

    Benson Botha, Country Director, Malawi

    Evans Ithiria, Director, Finance & Administration

    Caroline Martha Muringi, Senior Manager, Finance

    Sospeter Muiruri, Senior Manager, Grants & Budgets

    Loice Ochweri, Senior Manager, Human Resources

    Maarten van de Reep, Deputy Director, Programs


    United States

    Michele Anderson, Senior Manager, Human Resources

    Luveslyn Maule-Soleyn, Assistant Controller

    Joann Phelan, Senior Manager, Global Strategic Operations

    Alexis Tobolski, Director, Global Finance & Accounting

    Joanna Wald, Director, Global Grants & Contracts

    Austin Walker, Director, Global Operations

    Zach Watson, Chief of Staff


    External Relations

    Carlita Bevege, Senior Manager

     

    EAII Advisors, Evidence Action’s technical partner in India

    Sanjeev Chauhan, Director, Finance

    Puspita Datta, Deputy Director, MLE

    Meeta Mathur, Deputy Director, Iron and Folic Acid Supplementation

    Rakesh Parashar, Director, Programs

    Jyoti Puri, Director, Human Resources

    Anju Raheja, Deputy Director, Operations

    Shrabanti Sen, Director, MLE

    Ranajit Sengupta, Deputy Director, MLE

    Yudhishthar Sharma, Deputy Director, Finance

    Shikha Singhal, Deputy Director, Deworming

    Our Financials

    Financial Reports, Tax Returns, and Annual Reports

    Evidence Action was launched in 2013 when we began leading and managing Dispensers for Safe Water and the Deworm the World Initiative. The full transition from Innovations for Poverty Action which incubated both programs, took place in 2014.

    Our program expenses and revenue are detailed in our most recent financial documents:

    Evidence Action is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization in the United States, and contributions to us are tax deductible in the U.S. to the fullest extent allowable by law. Our EIN number is 90 087 4591.

    Our determination letter issued by the Internal Revenue Service can be found here.

    Our Policy Plan can be found here and our Privacy Statement here.

    Our Supporters

    Our Supporters

    Reducing poverty and improving livelihoods requires strategic investment of scarce resources. The generous contributions of our supporters help make this critical work possible. Our focus on solutions that are cost-effective and scalable, underpinned by rigorous evidence, requires that value for money in our programs and operations is of the utmost importance, maximizing our impact–and yours. 

    We are deeply grateful to those that have and continue to partner with us and recognize our supporters that gave $50,000 or more (2017-2021) to support Evidence Action’s work. Thank you!

     

    Butler Law Firm

    Centre For Effective Altruism

    Conrad N. Hilton Foundation through Millennium Water Alliance

    Douglas B. Marshall, Jr. Family Foundation

    Dubai Cares

    Effective Altruism Australia Ltd.

    Effective Altruism Foundation (Stiftung Für Effektiven Altruism)

    Effective Giving Netherlands

    Epic Foundation France

    Epic Foundation UK Ltd.

    Founders Pledge

    GiveWell

    Giving What We Can Trust

    Global Innovation Fund 

    Good Ventures

    Hempuli Oy

    IMC Pacific Foundation

    Innovations for Poverty Action

    J-PAL’s Governance Initiative

    Jackson Kemper Foundation

    Latter-day Saints Charities 

    Ocorian Trustees

    One Acre Fund

    Open Philanthropy Project Fund

    Ray and Tye Noorda Foundation

    Silicon Valley Community Foundation

    Steadview Capital Management

    Stichting Dioraphte

    Team Shakti NZ Limited

    The Clorox Company

    The End Fund

    The International Growth Centre

    The James Percy Foundation

    The Stone Family Foundation

    The World Bank Group, Strategic Impact Evaluation Fund*

    Three Graces Foundation

    The Waterloo Foundation

    The Life You Can Save

    UES Gemeinnützige GmbH für Effektives Spenden

     

    * IMPACT EVALUATION: BUILDING STATE CAPACITY AND NATIONAL UNITY WITH MARKET DESIGN:THE PROBLEM OF VOLUNTEER ASSIGNMENT IN KENYA’S G-UNITED PROGRAM