• Added Date: Tuesday, 22 April 2025
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DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS6 May 2025-23:59-GMT+05:30 India Standard Time (Colombo)

WFP celebrates and embraces diversity. It is committed to the principle of equal employment opportunity for all its employees and encourages qualified candidates to apply irrespective of race, colour, national origin, ethnic or social background, genetic information, gender, gender identity and/or expression, sexual orientation, religion or belief, HIV status or disability.


ABOUT WFP

The World Food Programme is the worldโ€™s largest humanitarian organization saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity, for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.


At WFP, people are at the heart of everything we do and the vision of the future WFP workforce is one of diverse, committed, skilled, and high performing teams, selected on merit, operating in a healthy and inclusive work environment, living WFP's values (Integrity, Collaboration, Commitment, Humanity, and Inclusion) and working with partners to save and change the lives of those WFP serves.

To learn more about WFP, visit our website: https://www.wfp.org and follow us on social media to keep up with our latest news: YouTube, LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, TikTok.

WHY JOIN WFP?

  • WFP is a 2020 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate.

  • WFP offers a highly inclusive, diverse, and multicultural working environment.

  • WFP invests in the personal & professional development of its employees through a range of training, accreditation, coaching, mentorship, and other programs as well as through internal mobility opportunities.

  • A career path in WFP provides an exciting opportunity to work across the various country, regional and global offices around the world, and with passionate colleagues who work tirelessly to ensure that effective humanitarian assistance reaches millions of people across the globe.

  • We offer an attractive compensation package (please refer to the Terms and Conditions section of this vacancy announcement).

    ORGANIZATIONAL CONTEXT:
    The United Nations World Food Programme is the world's largest humanitarian agency fighting hunger
    worldwide. The mission of WFP is to help the world achieve Zero Hunger (SDG 2) in our lifetimes. Every day, WFP works worldwide to ensure that no child goes to bed hungry and that the poorest and most vulnerable, particularly women and children, can access the nutritious food they need. WFP has been present in Sri Lanka since 1968 and provided assistance to the country in emergency response and protracted recovery interventions in the aftermath of man-made disasters such as the 27-year conflict and recurrent natural disasters (droughts and floods/landslides). Following the end of nearly three decades of armed conflict in 2009, Sri Lanka attained lower-middle-income-country status in January 2010, and then was elevated to upper-middle-income status in 2019. Exactly one year after (2020), the World Bank has reclassified again the country in the low-income category. Along with the post-impact of COVID-19, Sri Lanka is facing an economic crisis that has been steadily worsening since 2021, Given the massive lags in socio-economic progress, the need for progress in strengthening food security and nutrition, particularly nutrition, particularly in terms of food wastage, realizing gender equality and eliminating geographical and socio-economic disparities is critical in Sri Lanka.


    A 2nd five-year Country Strategic Plan (CSP 2023-2027) developed in consultation with the Government and other stakeholders and informed by contextual, gender and gap analyses, and recommendations from the 2017 National Strategic Review of Food Security and Nutrition towards saving life and changing life, frames WFPโ€™s engagement in supporting Sri Lankaโ€™s national development vision.


    The CSP has four major Strategic Outcomes:
    โ€ข Strategic outcome 1: People are better able to meet their urgent food and nutrition needs;
    โ€ข Strategic outcome 2: People have better nutrition, health and education outcomes;
    โ€ข Strategic outcome 3: People have improved and sustainable livelihoods; and
    โ€ข Strategic outcome 4: National programmes and systems are strengthened.

    Due to the problem of health indicators in Sri Lanka due to the impact of COVID 19 and the aftermath of Covid 19 - in comparison to its South Asian neighbors - malnutrition continue to pose a major challenge for the country, characterized by a high level of undernutrition, emerging problem of wasting, overweight and obesity and micronutrient deficiencies.


    The WFP Sri Lanka Country Strategic Plan 2023 โ€“ 2027 aims to support and facilitate vulnerable communities able to meet better nutrition and health and strengthen their sustainable livelihoods. This aims to improve food security and nutrition by empowering vulnerable communities, improve education outcomes and individuals to cope with urgent food and nutrition needs. It also assists with durable solutions for food assistance and livelihood support and strengthens national systems through technical support to ensure that gender-informed risk-sensitive planning is integrated into public investment policies and local development initiatives, redressing structural and socio-cultural inequalities.
    Also, WFP aims to support and facilitate multi-sector approaches to nutrition and food security through both nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive programming, including supporting the government to scale up its rice fortification effort, promoting positive nutrition practices, as well integrating nutrition lens within the WFP assisted School Meal Programme and sustainable livelihood support.

    BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE OF THE ASSIGNMENT:

    The National School Meals Programme (SMP), originally launched by the Government of Sri Lanka in 1931, is considered as an educational as well as a social protection intervention to support equal access to education and learning opportunities. Currently, about 67% of primary school children benefit from this initiative. The programme is a part of the national budget.
    The World Food Programme launched the Home-Grown School Feeding programme (HGSF) which is designed to stimulate local production: by purchasing the food required for the SMP from local smallholder farmers and processors they create a stable demand for quality and safe food, stimulate local production, support the development of local skills, and combat malnutrition. Whilst assisting the local smallholder farmers to develop their capacity for providing a reliable food supply, HGSF programmes are also expected to expand opportunities for smallholder farmers to gain access to markets and contribute to rural transformation. The focus of HGSF therefore is two-fold; creating a structured demand for and strategic procurement of locally produced food and building synergies with complementary interventions in order to enable smallholder farmers to participate in school feeding programmes.

    Two pilot projects have been completed with a country specific HGSF model to assess the operational feasibility of implementing the model through NSMP. With the successful implementation and lessons learned from the two pilot projects, the project has been expanded as phase 1 in 2021 to the new geographical areas of 04 districts of Anuradhapura, Vavuniya, Batticaloa and Polonnaruwa with the funding of Global Affairs Canada (GAC). Later in 2022 the activities under this were improved further with the Government of the Russian Federation in the same phase 1 districts. In 2023 as per the National Technical Advisory Group (TAG-HGSF) guidance the geographical locations further expanded for two new districts of Nuwaraeliya and Kilinochchi. Also, the Korea Financial Industry Foundation (KFIF) has provided some funds to expand the pilot success from 2023 onwards to other areas of Monaragala and Matale districts, where the pilot project has been implemented.

    Outcomes of the Project
    There are four expected outcomes:

    โ€ข Link the school meal programme with local agriculture sector to boost the local economy and

    enhance the financial sustainability of the NSMP

    โ€ข Children to get nutritious school meals and support positive behavioral changes towards nutrition wellbeing.

    โ€ข Strengthen local food system linked to school meal programme.

    โ€ข Economic and social empowerment for women involved with SMP through gender transformative approaches

    Implementation Oversight


    Project implementation is guided by a National Technical Advisory Group (TAG) appointed by the Partnership Secretariat for WFP Cooperation with the necessary technical assistance. At the Provincial and the District level implementation is overseen by a committee appointed by the Chief Secretary and the District Secretary with the members of relevant provincial ministries, District Director (Planning), Provincial Director for the department of Education, Provincial Director for the department of Agriculture, Provincial Director for the department of Animal Health & Production, District Agriculture Director, Provincial Director for Health, Regional Director Health, District Samurdhi Director, District Director for Livestockand District officer for Women Development and WFP Field Assistant for SMP.


    JOB PURPOSE:


    WFP is looking for skilled Field Assistants (FASMP) based in the Batticaloa Field Office to coordinate the HGSF Phase 1 program in Eastern Province. The FASMP will facilitate project implementation, coordinate between stakeholders and beneficiaries and perform monitoring of the project activities through a nutrition-sensitive and gender-transformative approach. The FASMP, under the direct supervision of the Program Officer SMP and the overall supervision of the Head of Nutrition and School Based Programs, is responsible for the following.

    KEY ACCOUNTABILITIES

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