DETAILED INFORMATION CAN BE FOUND ON THE FOLLOWING LINK:
https://jobs.undp.org/cj_view_job.cfm?cur_job_id=92008
The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Merged Districts Programme (KPMD) known as ‘Naway Wraz’ programme is a joint UN programme being implemented in five newly merged districts of KP (Khyber, Kurram, Orakzai, North and South Waziristan). The programme aims at supporting both the citizens of ex-FATA and the Government of KP to sustain and support returnees. In close collaboration with the Government of KP, the programme works to provide basic services and livelihood to the returnees and to support the administrative merger of FATA with the KP province. The programme has three key pillars including recovery and resilience, provision of timely basic services (health and education) and strengthening economic governance. At the UN, Naway Wraz programme is coordinated by UNRCO and implemented by four UN agencies including FAO, UNICEF, UNDP and UN Women. The programme is funded by Department for International Development (DFID).
Naway Wraz programme is a seven-year (2018-2024) DFID funded programme delivered by four UN agencies (FAO, UNWOMEN, UNICEF and UNDP) and led/coordinated by the UN Resident Coordinator’s Office in Pakistan. The programme was devised in response to the historic 25th Constitutional Amendment (2018) that merged FATA into the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa after decades of advocacy and struggle.
a) The Naway Wraz programme operates in 5 NMDs (Khyber, Orakzai, Kurram, South and North Waziristan) and aims to:
- Help communities and returnees become more resilient especially by restoring livelihoods
- Supporting improvement of, and access to various services: health, education, safe drinking water, sanitation, birth registration, national identify card registration for women
- Support the local and provincial governments to become more effective, accountable and response
- And support the improvement of the enabling environment for inclusive economic growth
The programme is currently in phase I (2 years ending October 2020) and adopts based on its delivery experience, learning and evolving community needs and government’s reform priorities.
The Naway Wraz programme is being delivered in a fragile, conflict prone and least developed part of the country. The UN Resident Coordinator’s Office has identified the need for an international expert/s (on safeguarding to advise the UN partners on how to operationalise the safeguarding approach/policies. There is a strong interplay between proactive management and safeguarding/PSEA. The expert is required to understand the local context, work with the UN Pakistan’s PSEA network and help operationalise UN’s safeguarding policies in the context of the programme. We expect that the expert will also enable the programme to understand and operationalise safeguarding required in lieu of the COVID-19 situation as well.
Considering the importance and time-sensitive nature of required work, the UNRCO would like to procure the services of an International expert**.**
Duties and Responsibilities
Scope of Work
Safeguarding and prevention of sexual abuse and exploitation is a top priority for DFID and the UN Secretary General. Whilst both DFID and the UN system have safeguarding policies and procedures in place, we recognise that more can be done to ensure these can be practically applied, especially in vulnerable communities in post conflict environments.
The programme operates in a post-conflict setting which is highly fragile. DFID and the UN system prioritized the need for a strong, contextualised safeguarding mechanism to be at the centre of the programme delivery. While specific UN agencies have their own safeguarding and grievance redressal mechanisms, Naway Wraz programme is also investing in developing a programme specific safeguarding approach – including investing in a project GRM system. The UNRCO has already commissioned and completed field research that will underpin the GRM system for the programme.
DFID/UNRCO have agreed that a programme specific Grievance Redress Mechanism (GRM) should develop a set of arrangements that enable local communities to raise grievances with the UN and DFID and seek redress when they perceive a negative impact arising from the activities of the programme. It is a keyway to mitigate, manage, and resolve potential or realized negative impacts, and contribute to positive relations especially between government and communities. It recognizes that UN agencies can make efficiency/effectiveness gains by adopting a harmonised, cross agency approach to safeguarding and grievance redress.
DFID and the UN are committed to applying the following principles in relation to safeguarding which include:
- Everyone has responsibility for safeguarding;
- Do no harm;
- Act with integrity, be transparent and accountable;
- Organizations have a safeguarding duty of care to beneficiaries, staff and volunteers, including where down-stream partners are part of delivery. This is including children and vulnerable adults in the community who are not direct beneficiaries but may be vulnerable to abuse;
- A child is defined as someone under the age of 18 regardless of the age of majority/consent in country. All children shall be treated equally, irrespective of race, gender, religion/or none, sexual orientation or disability;
- Organizations that work with children and vulnerable adults should apply a safeguarding lens to their promotional communications and fundraising activities.
D. Expected Outputs and Deliverables
In collaboration with DFID and the UNRCO, develop a contextualized safeguarding strategy for the programme. The key expectations from the inception phase are outlined below:
Assess ‘operationalization’ of the safeguarding policies and procedures highlighted/provided by the UN agencies (FAO, UNICEF, UNDP, UNWOMEN, UNFPA and UNRCO) through their due diligence assessments/trackers;
Identify and implement potential quick wins that can be delivered during the current phase, including, but not limited to, setting up a community of practice on safeguarding within the UN Agencies and providing customized safeguarding trainings to the UN field teams; helping the UN Teams to operationalise these in the field
Develop and deliver field level safeguarding trainings to the UN field teams, the delivery partners and contractors seconded to the government of the NMDs;
Identify gaps in the due diligence assessments of the partner UN Agencies (FAO, UNICEF, UNDP, UNWOMEN, UNFPA and UNRCO) and recommend ways to fix them as part of the post-inception implementation plan for safeguarding strategy;
Identify quarterly action items for the six UN agencies until the end of the phase I of the programme and advise DFID/UNRCO on ways to address the quality of implementation of the action items;
Share a proposal for implementation of the safeguarding strategy for the phase 2 (starting November 2020) of the Naway Wraz Programme
Work closely with the local consultants leading on the GRM tool to ensure reporting mechanism for PSEA/safeguarding risks are sensitively embedded in the GRM mechanism of the prgoramme.
Hold discussions with the local consultants thrice during the inception phase to brainstorm on the GRM tool and provide advice, particularly, on how to ensure that safeguarding concerns are effectively captured through the tool;
Provide written feedback on the GRM design developed by the local consultants with technical advice/input on inclusion of safeguarding in the overall design;
Providing feedback and advise (through calls and emails) on how to operationalise the GRM team successfully in the field with regards to safeguarding concerns;
As part of the implementation proposal, provide an assessment to DFID/RCO of the work done by the local consultant
How to apply:
Please see the link to find out more details and procedure to apply for the said consultancy: