Bodhi conducted an end-line evaluation of Mercy Corps' Addressing Diverse and Acute Primary Threats to Human Security in North-eastern Nigeria (ADAPT) Programme. The ADAPT programme aimed to provide timely and integrated multi-sector assistance and protection interventions to the most vulnerable populations and strengthen the resilience of displaced communities. The programme was implemented in the WASH, Shelter, Protection, Nutrition, Food Security, Multi-Purpose Cash Assistance (MPCA), and Agriculture sectors. ADAPT targeted underserved communities in five Local Government Areas in the Northeast region of Borno that included Damboa, Bama, Gwoza, Dikwa and Ngala. The purpose of the endline evaluation was to assess the performance of the programme in terms of relevance, impact, coherence, sustainability, effectiveness and efficiency, as well as benchmark baseline values for new indicators for the next phase of the programme. Our evaluation methodology included a regional-scale quantitative face-to-face survey to assess progress against fifteen standard Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance (BHA) indicators. We supplemented this quantitative data with qualitative interviews to provide depth and context to the findings. The evaluation employed an 'outcomes harvesting' approach to guide the development of our analytical framework. This comprehensive assessment aimed to measure the programme's impact on human security in North-eastern Nigeria and provide insights for future interventions in the region.