Consultant - MEACAM Researcher (Climate risks and impacts on underserved populations: Iraq & Yemen) - Remote

Tags: climate change English Environment
  • Added Date: Tuesday, 09 January 2024
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Description

Background:

Mercy Corps is a leading global organization powered by the belief that a better world is possible. In disaster, in hardship, in more than 40 countries around the world, we partner to put bold solutions into action โ€” helping people triumph over adversity and build stronger communities from within.

Over the past eight years, Mercy Corps has established a reputation for quality and timely data and analysis through its network of Crisis Analysis teams. Through Crisis Analysis, the agency has carved out a niche among information providers in the humanitarian and development space, owing to the granularity, reactivity and holistic approach of our products, which focus on some of the most hard-to-reach, data-poor and complex contexts requiring assistance. This is underpinned by Mercy Corpsโ€™ status as an operational INGO, which ensures that analysis products are practicable and relevant for humanitarian actors.

Purpose / Project Description:

Mercy Corpsโ€™ Crisis Analytics (CA) unit will develop a drought and flooding monitoring system and dashboard in three of the Middle East (ME) regionโ€™s most climate affected countries with significant population displacement: Syria, Iraq, and Yemen. Currently, there is no user-friendly system that draws actionable connections between climate risks and consequences for underserved populations in the ME, leaving a knowledge gap that hampers the effectiveness of humanitarian programming. In response to this reality and ECHOโ€™s priority of contributing to stronger data collection on analysis on disaster and climate-related displacement, the monitoring system will visualise drought conditions on an interactive map and provide statistics on the humanitarian impact of medium and longer-run weather and climate dynamics. Historic flood extent will be measured using satellite imagery analysis and visualised in another module, which will provide statistics on the humanitarian impact of, as well as the number of people likely displaced by, future flooding. The medium-run weather forecasts will be used as the basis for an early warning system that provides multiple threat levels that change in accordance with weather forecasts, suggesting more likely or severe flooding or drought conditions. This warning system, designed in collaboration with Mercy Corpsโ€™ programme teams, will be available on each module and to the humanitarian community, and will inform an anticipatory action framework based on the projected humanitarian impact of flooding or drought conditions. Additionally, quarterly narrative outputs will provide analysis of emerging climate impact trends, rapid onset event impact assessments, and programmatic, policy and donor recommendations, while providing an evidence base to support effective anticipatory action and enable humanitarian actors to make better decisions for effective programming and resource allocation.

The Middle East Regional Data Analysis Hub (MERDAH) is a platform where quantitative indicators developed by ME Crisis Analysis teams can be accessed, analyzed, and downloaded. The dashboard aims to show MC's capacity to develop timely and relevant quantitative analysis in the ME region and for other peers and external stakeholders to use, and to eventually serve several key objectives/purposes as part of our evidence-driven commitment. Dashboard modules are regionally cross-cutting by theme or approach; for example, agriculture analysis (theme) or price predictions (approach). The MERDAH currently covers Syria, Iraq, Palestine, Lebanon, and Yemen. The MERDAH will also host the drought and flooding anticipatory action modules produced for the ECHO-funded MEACAM project.

Consultant Objective:

The MEACAM Researcher will lead on drafting a white paper about the concept behind the MEACAM project, and will write two (2) country analyses[1] on climate-related topics specific to Yemen and Iraq (2 analyses for each country, one each quarter). The white paper will be drafted in conjunction with the Regional Data Analysis Specialist and involves the following three components: 1.) Review of existing publicly-available data analysis tools focused on climate, migration, and humanitarian impact, 2.) Identification and explanation of high priority climate/migration/humanitarian related information needs understood by key informant interviews of relevant Mercy Corps team members on the Syria, Yemen, and Iraq country missions, and 3.) Developing a plan to address the priority information needs with further data analysis products.

The Iraq and Yemen reports must be about the impact of climate change on migration and/or humanitarian need, and led by quantitative data analysis results delivered by the MEACAM data analysis modules on the MERDAH. The Researcher will produce two (2) analyses for each country, which will be written by the Researcher with advisory and editorial support from the Yemen Crisis Analysis team, Mercy Corps Iraq country team, Regional Data Analysis Specialist, and Regional Crisis Analysis Lead. The report centered on findings of the MEACAMโ€™s quantitative data analysis may also include qualitative data collected by the Researcher.

Outputs:

1 white paper = 10 days

2 quarterly Iraq analyses = 25 days (12.5 each)

2 quarterly Yemen analyses = 25 days (12.5 each)

Total โ€“ 5 outputs, 60 days

Consultant Activities:

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