Consultant on social protection and climate change

Support development of knowledge products for Fiji under CRISP initiative.

UNESCAP - Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific

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Application deadline in 4 days: Tuesday 21 Jul 2026 at 03:59 UTC

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Overview

Support development of knowledge products for Fiji under CRISP initiative.

You have:

  • Masters degree in economics, social development, climate change social administration or labour studies, or an equivalent 10-years work experience in climate change or social protection in Fiji.
  • At least 10 years working in a development context, including authoring reports and publications in areas relevant to climate change or social protection, employment and shock responsive social protection in Fiji is required.
  • Demonstrated expertise in research methodology.
  • Expertise and experience advising governments in the Pacific on climate change and/or social protection, including working with international organizations is desirable.
  • Must have excellent speaking and drafting skills in English.

Contract

This is a Consultancy contract. More about Consultancy contracts.

Result of Service

Under the direct supervision of the project manager and the overall guidance of the Chief of the Sustainable Socioeconomic Transformation Section, the consultant will support development of a coherent set of country-specific knowledge products for Fiji under the CRISP initiative, as guided by the Conceptual Framework on Climate Resilient and Inclusive Social Protection. These outputs will provide ESCAP and national counterparts with a clear and evidence-based assessment of climate-related vulnerabilities and social protection system performance, as well as actionable pathways for strengthening climate-responsive and shock-responsive social protection. The ultimate result of the service is to support national decision-making by delivering analytically robust, policy-relevant, and action-oriented outputs that identify system-level gaps, practical reform options, and clear institutional roles. The consultancy will also contribute to regional knowledge under CRISP by generating lessons and approaches that can inform similar efforts in other ESCAP member States.

Work Location

Fiji and/or Remotely

Expected duration

22/07/26-31/03/27

Duties and Responsibilities

Climate change and increasing socio-economic inequality are deeply intertwined, intensifying challenges for marginalized households who often lack the capacity and resources to manage complex shocks impacting health, income security, food security and displacement. Social protection is critical for the region’s response to the climate crisis. It reduces poverty and builds resilience before disasters occur and helps people cope better after a shock has happened. Through various combinations of income and in-kind transfers, contributory schemes and active labour market policies, social protection can support climate change policies and address the effects of climate change events. There is emerging acknowledgement of the role of social protection to strengthen climate resilience in climate change and Agenda 2030 related intergovernmental processes, highlighted in COP outcome documents, regional reports and forums and more recently in the 2024 Pact of the Future, Global Digital Compact and Declaration on Future Declarations. Despite the recognition on the need to integrate social protection and climate change sectors, there remain key capacity gaps in terms of policy integration, sectoral coordination mechanisms, lack of data, lack of analysis and understanding of key affected populations and climate financing mechanisms, and normative consensus. Although there is progress in promoting shock-responsive social protection, there is still limited awareness of the need to address risks arising from climate policies. As a result, there is limited capacity for countries to effectively harness social protection to adapt, and respond, to climate change policies and events. To strengthen these interlinkages, further efforts are required to harness policy integration, cross-sectoral coordination mechanisms, data as well as address key affected populations and increase knowledge and awareness on the urgency to integrate social protection and climate change policy tools. ESCAP is conducting a project to pioneer action in this emerging area for the Asia-Pacific region. It will build capacity of five beneficiary countries (Cambodia, Fiji, Indonesia, Sri Lanka and Thailand) that have engaged, or will engage, with ESCAP in the implementation of the Action Plan. It will engage five additional countries (China, Mongolia, Pakistan, Philippines and Vietnam) to share findings and build knowledge as part of ESCAP’s capacity development efforts through the Action Plan. It adopts a three-pronged approach to: a) Increase capacity to recognize social protection measures that mitigate climate risks and strengthen resilience for groups in vulnerable situations; b) Develop national capacities to quantify the impact of climate change on people and identify furthest behind groups; c) Enhance regional cooperation for better social protection strategies to mitigate climate impacts and increase resilience of groups left furthest behind. A national mapping will be conducted in Fiji that aims to promote institutional capacity for policy and programme development; support the development of appropriate social protection measures; strengthen the evidence base for climate action through the development of data tools; and also highlight needs and identifying potential avenues for financing these areas as well as programme implementation. The mapping will be based on the regional Conceptual Framework on Climate Resilient and Inclusive Social Protection that sets out 4 key sections: A) Climate context, B) Current social protection provision, C) Social protection and climate integration; D) Country pathways. To implement the CRISP initiative and research in Fiji, a team of consultants will be recruited to provide respective expertise on social protection and climate change, as well as on-the-ground research capacity. A consultant will be recruited to support assessment of climate-related risks to livelihoods and income security. Based on this analysis, the consultant will support the development of evidence-based and implementable country pathways for strengthening climate-resilient and inclusive social protection, working in close coordination with ESCAP and relevant national stakeholders. The consultant will provide climate change expertise as well as on-the-ground research to implement the CRISP initiative in Fiji.

Qualifications/special skills

Masters degree in economics, social development, climate change social administration or labour studies, or an equivalent 10-years work experience in climate change or social protection in Fiji. At least 10 years working in a development context, including authoring reports and publications in areas relevant to climate change or social protection, employment and shock responsive social protection in Fiji is required. Demonstrated expertise in research methodology. Expertise and experience advising governments in the Pacific on climate change and/or social protection, including working with international organizations is desirable.

Languages

Must have excellent speaking and drafting skills in English

Additional Information

Not available.

No Fee

THE UNITED NATIONS DOES NOT CHARGE A FEE AT ANY STAGE OF THE RECRUITMENT PROCESS (APPLICATION, INTERVIEW MEETING, PROCESSING, OR TRAINING). THE UNITED NATIONS DOES NOT CONCERN ITSELF WITH INFORMATION ON APPLICANTS’ BANK ACCOUNTS.

Potential interview questions

Describe a situation where you effectively applied your expertise in social protection to assist a vulnerable group. We want to understand your practical experience and how it relates to social protection measures. Provide a specific example that showcases your contribution and impact.
How have you integrated climate change considerations into your social protection strategies in past roles? The interviewer seeks to assess your ability to interlink these two critical areas. Pro members can see the explanation.
Can you provide an example of a comprehensive report you authored on climate-related vulnerabilities? Pro members can see the explanation. Pro members can see the explanation.
What methods do you employ to assess climate-related risks in a community? Pro members can see the explanation. Pro members can see the explanation.
In your experience, what gaps have you identified in social protection systems when it comes to climate resilience? Pro members can see the explanation. Pro members can see the explanation.
How do you ensure that your recommendations for climate-responsive social protection are actionable? Pro members can see the explanation. Pro members can see the explanation.
What challenges have you encountered when advising governments on climate change policies? Pro members can see the explanation. Pro members can see the explanation.
How do you keep informed about the latest developments in social protection and climate change? Pro members can see the explanation. Pro members can see the explanation.
Added 3 days ago - Updated 4 hours ago - Source: careers.un.org