Justice for Children Officer

Support UNICEF’s justice program focusing on child-friendly justice system and ensuring compliance of justice reforms.

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UNICEF - United Nations Children's Fund

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Application deadline 4 months ago: Monday 19 Jan 2026 at 00:00 UTC

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Overview

Support UNICEF’s justice program focusing on child-friendly justice system and ensuring compliance of justice reforms.

You have:

  • Minimum 8 years of relevant professional experience in justice reform or child protection, out of which minimum 2 years on justice for children.
  • Experience in programme or project management, preferably within the UN system, international organisations or development programmes.
  • Proven experience of working with relevant national authorities relevant for justice for children.
  • Demonstrated knowledge and understanding of the justice system reform, key guiding frameworks, standards and documents.
  • Strong understanding of relevant international technical guidelines and standards on child friendly justice.
  • Ability to manage multiple activities and coordinate diverse stakeholders, and engage on cross sectoral initiatives.
  • Strong analytical, drafting and communication skills.
  • Ability to work effectively in a team and in complex institutional environments.
  • Excellent oral and written English and Serbian language skills.
  • Proven experience in managing EU funded project is an asset.

Contract

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Each year in Serbia thousands of children find themselves in contact with the justice system in a range of different ways, be it in conflict with law, as victims or witnesses of crime, or in need of free legal aid. When faced with the justice system, children are often faced with processes which they cannot understand, which are often not supportive and consequently may result in additional negative consequences on a child’s development. Despite important legislative and policy advances multiple challenges remain including related to the consistent application of diversionary measures, the use of alternative sanctions, the reintegration of children in conflict with the law, and the effective protection of child victims and witnesses in criminal proceedings. In addition, free legal aid for children is uneven in quality and availability, while the regulatory framework and institutional capacities require further reinforcement to coordinate, monitor, and advance the justice for children agenda.

As access to justice is both a fundamental human right and an essential prerequisite for the enjoyment and protection of other human rights UNICEF with partners works on promotion of effective and equitable access to justice for children in contact with the law, with focus on creation of a child-friendly justice system that works in the best interests of the child, where children are protected and participate meaningfully in the processes where decisions about them are made.

Together with Ministry of Justice as the lead institutional counterpart, and Ministry of Labor, Employment, Veteran and Social Affairs, and with support from European Union Delegation in Serbia, UNICEF has initiated a three year project to address these remaining challenges contribute to ensuring that all children in Serbia have equitable access to a child-friendly justice system.

The project contributes directly to Sustainable Development Goal 16 on just, peaceful and inclusive societies and in particular target 16.3 (access to justice for all) and target 16.2 (ending violence against children). At the national level, the project supports Serbia’s EU accession process under Chapter 23 and is aligned with key frameworks by such as the National Strategy for the Realization of the Rights of Victims and Witnesses of Criminal Offenses 2020-2025 (NSRRVWCO), the Judicial Development Strategy 2020–2025, and the Strategy on prevention and protection from discrimination 2022-2030.

The project has four expected outcomes: 1. Improved performance of the courts/prosecutors’ offices and service providers in implementing diversionary measures, alternative sanctions and reintegration of children in conflict with the law. 2. Improved performance of the courts/prosecutors’ offices and service providers in relation to the rights of child victims and witnesses in criminal proceedings, as stipulated by the Juvenile Justice Law. 3. Strengthened system capacities for enabling free legal aid providers from local self-governments to provide child friendly legal aid for children. 4. Strengthened institutional capacities of Ministry of Justice to lead, coordinate, monitor and advance the justice for children’s agenda in line with international standards.

Justice for Children Officer will support UNICEF’s justice program, and ensuring quality, compliance, and timely delivery of complex reforms in justice for children, focusing mostly on managing the EU IPA Justice project. The role requires sector expertise to support implementation of activities which include regulatory development, capacity building, and institutional strengthening of MoJ and partners.

Task 1: Program/Project Planning and Implementation • Planning, coordination and implementation of justice for children activities in line with approved work plans, budgets and results frameworks. • Management of project partnerships, consultants and service providers, including preparation of Terms of Reference, monitoring deliverables and ensuring quality, monitoring budget utilization. • Organisation of trainings, workshops, consultations, advocacy events and capacity-building activities. • Identification of implementation challenges and risks and propose corrective actions. • Liaising with expert consultants to ensure quality control and technical oversight of project components for alignment with CRC, EU and other international standards.

Task 2: Manage multi-stakeholder engagement with MoJ, MoLEVSA, Judicial Academy, CSOs • Liaising with government counterparts, including ministries, judiciary, prosecution offices, police, social welfare institutions, Academia. • Coordination with UN agencies, international organizations, civil society organizations and development partners active in justice and child protection. • Promoting multidisciplinary and child-centered approaches across sectors.

Task 3: Monitoring, Reporting and Knowledge Management • Monitoring of program progress against indicators and targets, in line with UNICEF’s and donor reporting requirements. • Preparation of donor and internal reports, briefing notes and presentations. • Contribute to other internal and external documents related to justice for children. • Document lessons learned and good practices to inform program improvement and knowledge sharing.

☒ Accountability ☒ Adaptability and Flexibility ☒ Building Trust ☒ Commitment and Motivation ☒ Communication ☒ Creativity ☒ Ethics and Values ☒ Integrity ☒ Planning and Organizing ☒ Professionalism ☒ Self-Management ☒ Working in Teams

• Minimum 8 years of relevant professional experience in justice reform or child protection, out of which minimum 2 years on justice for children; • Experience in programme or project management, preferably within the UN system, international organisations or development programmes; • Proven experience of working with relevant national authorities relevant for justice for children; • Demonstrated knowledge and understanding of the justice system reform, key guiding frameworks, standards and documents; • Strong understanding of relevant international technical guidelines and standards on child friendly justice; • Ability to manage multiple activities and coordinate diverse stakeholders, and engage on cross sectoral initiatives; • Strong analytical, drafting and communication skills; • Ability to work effectively in a team and in complex institutional environments; • Excellent oral and written English and Serbian language skills; • Proven experience in managing EU funded project is an asset.

The UN Volunteer will be responsible for arranging his/her housing and other living essentials. You can check full entitlements at the duty station at https://app.unv.org/calculator. The complete UN Volunteer Conditions of Service is available at https://explore.unv.org/cos.

Selected candidates for certain occupational groups may be subject to inoculation (vaccination) requirements, including against SARS-CoV-2 (Covid-19) in line with the applicable host entity’s policy.

Potential interview questions

Can you describe your experience with justice system reforms and how it relates to children? This question assesses the candidate's relevant experience in justice reforms focused on children. Discuss specific projects or initiatives you've worked on that involved justice reforms aimed at children.
How have you effectively engaged with multiple stakeholders in your previous roles? This question evaluates the candidate's stakeholder engagement skills. Pro members can see the explanation.
What strategies would you employ to promote child-friendly justice? Pro members can see the explanation. Pro members can see the explanation.
Describe a challenging project you've managed. What were the obstacles and how did you overcome them? Pro members can see the explanation. Pro members can see the explanation.
How would you go about monitoring and evaluating a project focused on justice for children? Pro members can see the explanation. Pro members can see the explanation.
What experience do you have with regulatory development in the justice system? Pro members can see the explanation. Pro members can see the explanation.
Can you provide examples of your communication skills, particularly in drafting reports or proposals? Pro members can see the explanation. Pro members can see the explanation.
In what ways have you demonstrated commitment to ethical standards in your work? Pro members can see the explanation. Pro members can see the explanation.
Added 5 months ago - Updated 4 months ago - Source: unv.org