Joint Initiative for Religious Strategic Action (JISRA)

April 2025 - March 2026

Joint Initiative for Religious Strategic Action (JISRA)

JISRA is a partnership of 50 civil society organisations based in Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iraq, Kenya, Mali, Nigeria and Uganda (with supporting lobby and advocacy in Europe and the USA). AP’s role has been to design and lead the programme’s final evaluation, a key learning activity.

OVERVIEW
OBJECTIVES

The overall goal of JISRA is to promote peaceful and just societies where all enjoy Freedom of Religion and Belief (FoRB).

TIMELINE

April 2025March 2026

EXPERTS

Bernardo Monzani

Bernardo Venturi

Evelyn Pauls

PARTNERS
  • Faith to Action Network
  • Mensen met een Missie
  • Search for Common Ground
  • Tearfund 
INSTITUTIONAL PARTNER
  • Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs 

Overview

JISRA is a partnership of 50 civil society organisations based in Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iraq, Kenya, Mali, Nigeria and Uganda (with supporting lobby and advocacy in Europe and the USA).
The basis of the programme is JISRA’s conviction that Freedom of Religion and Belief (FoRB) and interfaith dialogue are essential and integral to the realisation of peaceful and just societies. In addition, diverse religious actors, including women and youth, can and need to play an important role in this process as change makers. JISRA believes their voices must be heard.
That is why JISRA stimulates positive forces within and between religious communities for more peaceful and inclusive societies. From the word ‘jisr’ which means bridge in Arabic, JISRA leverages the constructive role of religious actors. This programme addresses harmful norms and narratives within religious communities, stimulates cooperation between religions and shows that different religious traditions can come together in a common vision for a better and fairer society. JISRA pays special attention to increasing the role of women and youth in setting the vision and solutions to advancing FoRB and promoting youth and women’s participation in decision-making fora.
AP’s role has been to design and lead the programme’s final evaluation, a key learning activity.

The final evaluation will be completed in early 2026.

Objectives

The overall goal of JISRA is to promote peaceful and just societies where all enjoy Freedom of Religion and Belief (FoRB).

The specific objectives for this evaluation are:

  • To assess the effectiveness, coherence and sustainability of the programme, and create knowledge relating to JISRA’s progress towards expected short, medium and long-term outcomes
  • To develop actionable recommendations for future programming

Methodology

The final evaluation is a critically important learning activity under the JISRA programme, which is meant to create the space for a critical reflection of what the programme did well, and what it could improve in the future. For this reason, AP is using a methodology that is participatory (AP works with partners and stakeholders to ensure that the evaluation addresses their concerns and priorities), theory-based (questions related to impact and effectiveness are framed in relation to the programme’s theory of change), and reliant on mixed methods (AP uses different tools, and both qualitative and quantitative data).

Key findings

JISRA worked through four so-called pathways, which can be seen as programmatic strategies, whose completion would lead to the achievement of expected outcomes, in line with the programme’s theory of change. In brief, these are the pathways:

  • Intra-religious pathway – JISRA partnered with, mentored, empowered and created linkages between religious actors to enable them to promote inclusive and tolerant attitudes amongst their constituencies
  • Inter-religious pathway – JISRA capacitated and empowered religious actors to build bridges across religious divides
  • Extra-religious pathway – JSIRA channelled and voiced religious actors’ and communities’ demands at relevant spaces that impact FoRB. It also promoted various types of CSOs (faith/non-faith) to advocate in a unified voice
  • Cross-cutting pathway – JISRA wanted to empower women and youth, and challenge the stereotypes and norms that undermine their active participation in peacebuilding

The evaluation is currently assessing what progress the programme achieved under each of these pathways.