United Nations Development Programme
Experience: 5 to 10 Years
Skill Required: HR and Admin
Apply By: 09-02-2023
UN Women, grounded in the vision of equality enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations, works for the elimination of discrimination against women and girls; the empowerment of women; and the achievement of equality between women and men as partners and beneficiaries of development, human rights, humanitarian action and peace and security. UN Women’s engagement in humanitarian action and DRR is to ensure consistency and sustainability in addressing gender equality concerns across the humanitarian-development nexus. UN Women seeks to achieve inclusive and gender responsive humanitarian responses by working with governments, INGOs, other UN agencies as well as CBOs, particularly women led CBOs.
The disaster and humanitarian context in the ESAR remain complex and dynamic underpinned by climate related factors, conflict/displacement/fragility, urbanization, pandemics, micro and macro level shocks such as the COVID 19 pandemic, the on-going war between Ukraine and Russia that has negatively affected basic commodity prices, food chains and access globally. These have and continue to disproportionately impact women and girls due to pre-existing gender inequalities before and during crisis.
Across the ESA region, climate related disasters and events are on the increase, in the Horn of Africa, failed rains over four consecutive seasons (for the period 2021-2022) have translated into a situation of severe food insecurity a climatic event not seen in at least 40 years.[1] Approximately 21.1m people face high level of food insecurity due to the drought including 3.2m in IPC[2] 4 – emergency in Kenya and Somalia, and 213,180 people in IPC 5 – catastrophic/famine conditions in Somalia.
COVID-19 has impacted the region with economic growth contracting from 2.4 percent in 2019 to between -2.1 and -5.1 percent in 2020 causing deepening of poverty, reduced agricultural productivity and weakened supply chains.[3] In IDP and refugee settings within Uganda and Somalia, impacts of COVID 19 are particularly severe given the pre-existing inequalities. These twin challenges have impacted implementation of COVID 19 prevention measures. Through the LEAP Programme both Uganda and Somalia are addressing some key barriers to service uptake especially in the IDP settings.
In the ESA region, similar efforts are on-going with advocacy on gender inclusive policies and frameworks, capacity development, and provision of services to the most vulnerable women affected by ongoing crisis such as the COVID 19 pandemic, severe food insecurity and the Ebola disease outbreak.
The Government of Japan is a key partner supporting UN Women through the LEAP programming approach. Over the 2022-2023 period, both Uganda and Somalia received direct funding to promote gender responsive COVID 19 interventions targeting 15,760 direct beneficiaries over a 12-month period commencing April 2022 to March 2023. To enhance the quality of monitoring and reporting of the Programme, the regional office is coordinating workshops in each of the countries targeting the implementing partners [IPs] as well as select staff directly involved in data collection, validation and collation for monitoring and reporting purposes.
To capture the results of the Programme as well as document accurately lessons learned, UN Women Office for East and Southern Africa will coordinate an End of Programme Evaluation. To this end, the office seeks the services of a national consultant to lead and coordinate the Evaluation exercise in collaboration with consultants in both Uganda and Somalia after implementation has come to a close in March 2023.
Objectives of the assignment:
The UN Women Evaluation Policy and the UN Women Evaluation Strategic Plan 2014-2017 are the main guiding documents that set forth the principles and organizational framework for evaluation planning, conduct and follow-up in UN Women. These principles are aligned with the United Nations Evaluation Group (UNEG) Norms and Standards for Evaluation in the UN System and the Guidelines. The key principles for gender-responsive evaluation at UN Women are: 1) National ownership and leadership; 2) UN system coordination and coherence with regard to gender equality and the empowerment of women; 3) Innovation; 4) Fair power relations and empowerment; 5) Participation and inclusion; 6) Independence and impartiality; 7) Transparency; 8) Quality and credibility; 9) Intentionality and use of evaluation; and 10) Ethics.
The one-year LEAP Japan programme, whose implementation commenced in April 2022 will end in March 2023. In line with the programme requirements and the UN Women evaluation policy, an end of programme evaluation will be conducted.
The purpose of this independent end-term evaluation is to assess the programme achievements against the set objectives, identify and document lessons learnt (including design issues, lessons and best practices that can be up-scaled or replicated), and assess how the program contributed to strengthening the protection, leadership and empowerment of over 15,760 vulnerable women, men and youth affected by COVID-19 in IDP and refugee camps of Uganda and Somalia.
It is a priority for UN Women that this end line program evaluation will be gender-responsive and will actively support the achievement of gender equality and women’s empowerment, with emphasis on UN Women key areas central to supporting women and girls’ empowerment in humanitarian action: Leadership and participation, Protection and safety, and Economic well-being.
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Source: https://jobs.undp.org/cj_view_job.cfm?cur_job_id=111104