Food Security & Livelihoods Sector Coordinator, Whole of Syria - Jordan

Tags: English Environment
  • Added Date: Wednesday, 24 January 2024
5 Steps to get a job in the United Nations


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 helping people triumph over adversity and build stronger communities from within. Now, and for the future.

Program / Department Summary
The war in Syria continues; more than 11 million people have been displaced from their homes and the number relying on humanitarian assistance continues to grow. In response, a large number of NGOs and other humanitarian actors are providing assistance inside Syria from Damascus or cross-border/remotely from Turkey, Jordan, and Lebanon. As needs continue to outpace response, the UN and its humanitarian partners embarked on a Whole of Syria (WOS) approach in September 2014 in order to improve overall capacity and expand operational reach. Mercy Corps is at the forefront of the Syria Response and the WoS approach, and is working to strengthen our approach to immediate as well as longer term programming for Syrians, including those who have been displaced across the region. It is imperative that Mercy Corps present itself as a key and reliable partner with various donors, INGOs, government authorities and civil society actors, to be part of the process of positive change. The cornerstone of the Whole of Syria (WOS) approach is a commitment by all humanitarian partners to a coordinated response through the IASC sector / cluster approach to increase the efficiency and effectiveness of their response through (1) developing a principled, predictable and systematic operational planning process; (2) ensuring greater coherence across the different operational modalities (ie. cross-line, cross-border or regular programs) through improved coordination; and (3) strengthening information-sharing and monitoring of response. To better coordinate food security and livelihood interventions for Syria, Mercy Corps is looking to recruit a person on STA bases to fill the role of Syria FSS NGO Co-coordinator.

General Position Summary
The objective of a country-level Food Security Cluster is to ensure a timely, coherent and effective food security response by mobilizing stakeholders to respond in a strategic manner to a humanitarian crisis. The role of the Food Security Sector Coordinator, as set out in the IASC Generic Terms of Reference for Sector Leads at Country Level, is to lead and facilitate this process by fulfilling efficiently the Clusterโ€™s/sectorโ€™s six core functions: 1) Effective Service Delivery; (2) Inform strategic decision making; (3) Plan and develop strategy; (4) Monitor and evaluate performance; (5) Develop contingency plan/preparedness; (6) Advocacy.

The purpose of this position is to lead the Food Security Cluster and support Whole of Syria related coordination issues including a comprehensive Needs, Response and Gaps analysis. The successful candidate will work closely with key humanitarian partners in the sector to ensure that participants work collectively and actions are coordinated.

The Food Security Sector Coordinator will work impartially with all members of the Food Security Clusters/Working Groups and serve and represent the group as a whole. They will work closely with the UN OCHA Regional Humanitarian Coordinatorโ€™s (RHC) office/ UN OCHA Syria Humanitarian Coordinatorโ€™s (HC) office and WFP Regional Deputy Emergency Coordinator or their designated official as required.

Essential Job Functions:

COORDINATION & REPORTING

  • Identify key humanitarian partners for the sector, respecting their existing mandates and program priorities.

  • Liaise and follow up with new humanitarian partners on a bilateral basis in order to be as inclusive as possible while supporting them in establishing their FSL-related programming.

  • Provide appropriate coordination with all humanitarian partners (including national and international NGOs, the Red Crescent Movement, and other international organizations active in the sector) as well as with national authorities and local structures.

  • Be in charge of Inter-Agency Convoy Planning with the three formal hubs (and two informal hubs) on a monthly basis to support OCHA on submitting plans to the Syrian MOFA and ensuring IA Convoys are including necessary food assistance in specific besieged and hard-to-reach locations.

  • Ensure that participants within each sector work collectively, ensuring the complementarity of the various stakeholderโ€™s actions, by strongly promoting inter-sectoral work and synchronizing assessments, response plan and analysis โ€“ especially in emergency situations.

  • Promote integrated and collaborative work with the Nutrition Sector at strategic and operational levels to ensure integrated and more synchronized approach by further joining both sectors in terms of assessments, program implementation and capacity building.

  • Convene and facilitate sector meetings and ensure that they are well-managed and action and results- oriented, with decisions clearly communicated to relevant cluster partners and stakeholders.

  • Establish/maintain appropriate sectoral and intersectoral coordination mechanisms, including working groups at the regional and national level.

  • Ensuring effective information sharing (with OCHA support), both within the sector and with other clusters/working group hubs through inter-cluster coordination mechanisms.

  • Ensuring adequate monitoring mechanisms are in place to review impact of the sector and progress against implementation plans to include an analytical interpretation of best available information in order to benchmark progress of the emergency response over time; i.e. use of monitoring indicators (quantity, quality, coverage, continuity and cost) of interventions, which are derived from working towards meeting standards.

  • Ensuring regular and adequate reporting against sector indicators of intervention progress and impact (quantity, quality, coverage, continuity and cost), to include a sector gaps analysis.

  • In collaboration with food security sector partners through the sector/cluster hubs based on the information collected develop a comprehensive gaps analysis for Syria.

  • Ensure predictable responses within the sector, including the identification of gaps and the updating of sector response plans and integration of the IASCโ€™s agreed priority cross-cutting issues, including strongly promoting Protection mainstreaming in FSL activities across Syria and in various hubs (advocacy, capacity building)

  • Establish, disseminate and apply technical standards and best practices, through consultative approach with all partners within and across hubs whenever possible.

  • Lead emergency preparedness and contingency planning within and across hubs.

  • Represent the Food Security Sector and act as an ad-hoc sector coordinator for Iraq Cross-Border and Lebanon partnership programming through the WOS approach.

  • Work closely with North East Syria Food Security Sector Coordinator and on a daily basis with partners across three hubs, coordinating and activate response delivery at the field level in an extremely timely basis (within 72h of the onset), preparing monthly and micro plans, liaising with other sectors, hubs, local authorities and OCHA daily.

  • Support the Agriculture/Livelihoods Sub-Working Group in order to map out partnersโ€™ activities to ensure consistency and kits harmonization, prevent overlaps, and align partnersโ€™ implementation with seasonality.

  • Support the Cash-Based Working Group in North East Syria and link closely with Food Security, Livelihoods and Emergency Response across the region.

  • Facilitate with all hubs harmonized Food Security Sector tools/guidance, for example Food Basket toolkits and rapid assessment checklists.

  • Initiate and lead on studies/assessments pertaining to Food Security and cross-cutting issues, including: Whole of Syria FSL Assessments; FSLA, Cash-Based Response Feasibility Study; Bakeries Mapping, Damage and Rehabilitation Assessments; Piloting and rolling-out Integrated Food Insecurity Phase Classification (IPC), ideally on a bi-yearly basis to ensure updated needs overview twice a year.

    REPRESENTATION & ADVOCACY

Recommended for you