Monitoring and Evaluation Officer

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MONUSCO - United Nations Organisation Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo

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Application deadline 2 years ago: Thursday 4 Nov 2021 at 00:00 UTC

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Contract

This is a UNV International Specialist contract. This kind of contract is known as International UN Volunteer. It is normally internationally recruited only. More about UNV International Specialist contracts.

Assignment is with family (KINSHASA)

Under the supervision of the Senior Gender Adviser, Chief of Gender Affairs Section, the Monitoring and Evaluation Officer will have the following responsibilities:

• Supports and guides the implementation of UN Security Council Resolutions on Women, Peace and Security;

• Supports the implementation of DPKO/DFS guidance on Gender in Peacekeeping Operations;

• Advances the accountability for the mission’s gender priorities and mainstreaming into the work of each mission component, and technically supports the mission’s Gender Focal Points to deliver information for the quarterly gender reports;

• Leads the knowledge management and data collection process of the Gender Affairs Section, notably through systematic monitoring, collection and presentation of the information gained from the mission’s Gender Focal Points and other assessments;

• Supports the mission’s components/sections/ offices with crafting gender analysis and defining or updating their gender sensitive indicators and sex disaggregated data entry points;

• Provides technical inputs and support to the Gender Affairs Officers through all steps of the introduction and use of the gender markers in the mission including drafting, follow-up on exchange and preparation of Gender Focal Points sessions and trainings;

• In close collaboration with the Gender Affairs Officers, monitor, analyze and distil benchmarks for the improvement of the mission’s gender markers;

• Under the guidance of the Senior Gender Adviser, contributes to the preparation of the gender RBB (results-based budgeting) log frame with time and input targets, including involved parties with responsibilities and tasks. Moves the roll-out and accompany with follow-up, implementation milestones of RBB activities by the Gender staff in HQ and in the field as well as by the partnering sections. Ensures forecasts, monthly activity reporting and mid and end-of-cycle performance assessments;

• Facilitates monitoring, evaluation, reporting and benchmarking for main deliverables by the UN Police, the Force and substantial sections on gender as required;

• Drafts, collates and edits specific inputs from the progress achieved, lessons learned and improvement options for mission reports and the Section’s quarterly electronic information digest;

• Performs other duties as required.

  • Client Orientation;
  • Communication;
  • Creativity;
  • Ethics and Values Integrity;
  • Planning and Organizing Professionalism;
  • Respect for Diversity Technological Awareness Working in Teams.

social sciences or human rights or development sciences or gender.

Excellent use of Excel, Word, Power Point and social media are also required.

The Democratic Republic of Congo is the second largest country in Africa, and as a result is quite diverse. Living conditions therefore vary between MONUSCO duty stations, with all usual amenities present in the capital Kinshasa, but only very basic conditions in remote duty stations in the provinces, where, for instance, there may be no guarantee of public power supply nor running water. The ability to live and work in difficult and harsh conditions of developing countries is essential. Accommodation is very expensive in both Kinshasa and Lubumbashi. Supermarkets exist in the large towns (e.g. Bukavu, Kisangani), but consumer items are generally very expensive (as everything is imported). For food, local markets offer a much cheaper alternative. All MONUSCO duty stations are considered non-family duty stations, except for Kinshasa, Lubumbashi and Entebbe which are now considered family duty stations, and most are currently under UN Security Phase III (“relocation phase”: internationally-recruited staff are temporarily concentrated or relocated to specified sites/locations). In addition to insecurity related to the relatively volatile political situation as well as various conflict situations, certain places are subject to increasing street and residential crime, including in Kinshasa and Goma. Some degree of medical service is provided in all MONUSCO duty stations. Certain vaccinations are mandatory for MONUSCO personnel to enter the DRC, while others are compulsory for all other incoming persons. It is possible for incoming MONUSCO personnel, including UN Volunteers, to be asked to provide proof of some or all vaccinations, though this is unlikely. All UN Volunteers must ensure that they are up-to-date with all appropriate vaccinations, which should be clearly and properly endorsed in the International Certificate of Vaccination (“carte jaune”). Malaria is present virtually throughout the DRC, and it is therefore recommended to take prophylaxis. The unit of currency is the Congolese Franc. The US dollar is the other preferred currency. It may be impossible to exchange traveller’s checks away from the capital city. Credit cards are usually accepted in major hotels only in Kinshasa. In larger towns and cities (e.g. Kinshasa, Goma, Bukavu, Kisangani), UN Volunteers are recommended to open US Dollar bank accounts, while in other places, banks may be absent (including ATMs) and VLA payments will be processed in cash. UN Volunteers have the possibility to send part of their allowances to a bank account abroad. In addition to French, there are four major spoken languages in DRC, namely Lingala, Kikongo, Tshiluba and Swahili.

Added 2 years ago - Updated 2 years ago - Source: unv.org