National Cash Working Coordinator - Programmatic Co-Chair - DRC

Tags: international relations English Environment
  • Added Date: Thursday, 08 June 2023
5 Steps to get a job in the United Nations

Mercy Corps is powered by the belief that a better world is possible. To do this, we know our teams do their best work when they are diverse and every team member feels that they belong. We welcome diverse backgrounds, perspectives, and skills so that we can be stronger and have long term impact.

The Program / Department / Team

Mercy Corps has been operating in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) since August 2007, with a staff of nearly 400 people working in North and South Kivu and Ituri to support vulnerable communities through crises, while fostering programs that build resilience and promote long-term change. Mercy Corpsโ€™ national office is in Goma with sub-field offices in Ituri and North and South Kivu. Mercy Corpsโ€™ key programming areas include a combination of immediate humanitarian response programs including leadership of the INGO Rapid Response Consortium (SAFER) and longer-term development initiatives to include: 1) Improve water service delivery and ensuring equitable access to Water, Sanitation and Hygiene services in urban and rural areas; 2) Improve food security and nutrition; 3) Promote diversified livelihoods, economic recovery, and development.

Mercy Corps has been a global leader in Cash and Voucher Assistance (CVA), which represents about half of Mercy Corpsโ€™ humanitarian portfolio. This rapid growth within Mercy Corps aligns with industry trends, high level commitments made at the 2016 World Humanitarian Summit, and Grand Bargain work streams to increase CVA. As a firm believer in the efficacy of cash programming, Mercy Corps has implemented CTP in over 30 countries. Mercy Corps was the first agency to implement CVA in response to the Indian Ocean Tsunami in 2004, the first to pilot cash-for-work in Afghanistan, the first mobile money program in Libya, and the first to use electronic vouchers in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The Position

The strategic coordination of cash transfer programming at the national level and the interest on multi-purpose cash assistance has increased in recent years in the DRC, in line with the trends in the wider context of humanitarian assistance. The setting up of the National Cash Working Group (CWG-n) by the Humanitarian Country Team (HCT) in 2016, under the recommendation of the National Inter Cluster (ICN), has been welcomed as a positive reform.

The overall goal of the CWG-n, part of the ICN, is to support the development of a strategic approach to sectoral, multi-โ€‹sectoral and multi-purpose cash assistance, with the objective to create an environment conducive to the implementation of harmonized and coordinated work and better integration into the humanitarian programming cycle in the DRC. It is intended to oversee the various sub-national CWGs and actively engage within the ICN to strengthen the links between operational and strategic discussions.

The involvement of NGOs in humanitarian coordination has been effective since the 2005 humanitarian reform, but their commitment to leadership in humanitarian coordination is often limited by the lack of dedicated resources for carrying out activities other than those predetermined by their leadership programs / projects.

The programmatic co-chair of the CWG-n will be critical in strengthening the role of NGOs in the wider framework of the humanitarian architecture at the central level in the DRC (the CWG-n being a subgroup of the ICN).

As a leading cash actor in DRC, it will also be important for the CWG co-chair to coordinate and collaborate directly with Mercy Corps and its partners for the purposes of harmonization and advocacy at all levels.

Essential Responsibilities

STRATEGY AND PLANNING

  • Serve as co-chair of the national CWG, leading its direction and approach, including efforts at the provincial level: prepare, organize, chair and ensure follow-up on regular CWG meetings and exchanges between partners and ensure inclusiveness of the group; ensure relevant agenda topics are inclusive, transparent, adaptive and reflective of cash actors' needs; ensure CVA is coordinated, harmonized, and in line with best practices.

  • Support the implementation of the transition plan toward the IASC approved new cash coordination model.

  • Provide strategic insight on the conceptualization of transition/linkage from humanitarian CVA wherever possible, with particular emphasis on referrals and alignment with existing social protection systems; and develop and maintain relationships with key governmental bodies active in the social protection space, in complementarity with social protection actors.

  • Promote and give guidance on the centrality of Cash and Voucher Assistance (CVA) in the DRC context.

  • Support drafting of CWG work plans, in line with ICN/HCT priorities, for the duration of applicable HPC frameworks.

  • Develop strategies with the CWG partners to ensure that CVA best practices are systematically implemented and updated in humanitarian response interventions.

    TECHNICAL OVERSIGHT

    • Contribute to the process of developing multi-purpose cash transfer response strategies during the CERF and Country Humanitarian Fund processes, including the strategic review and technical review of projects submitted by stakeholders.

    • Support CWG-n members in the development of key advocacy messages to facilitate and contribute to the operational and strategic decision-making process within the ICN and the HCT.

    • Support the CWGโ€™s obligations with regards to updating HRP, Operational Plans and Dashboard in collaboration with OCHA teams.

    • Coordinate the provision of direct technical advice and solutions to CWG members and clusters for efficient, effective and context appropriate CVA.

    • Support and monitor the implementation of the CWG-n work plan (roadmap); divide responsibility for roadmap objectives with the non-programmatic co-chair (OCHA).

    • Support the information management capabilities of the CWG-n, specifically the collection and consolidation of information on cash and voucher assistance (4W) and multi-purpose cash transfers (Dashboard).

    • Develop and strengthen the capacity of CWG members, especially national actors to implement CVA in line with CWG standards and best practices worldwide.

    • Draft MPC and sector specific CVA guidelines, key messages and Standard Operational Procedures as needed.

    • Collate, review, and make available information on markets, financial infrastructure and available delivery mechanisms and advise implementing agencies on opportunities and constraints.

    • Assist the CWG in designing tools for, and the implementation of, market and needs assessment, response analyses, selection of delivery mechanisms and PDM.

      INFLUENCE & REPRESENTATION

Recommended for you