Strengthening Climate Knowledge and Sector Strategies in Argentina

Challenge The conclusions of the Argentine Second National Communication (2008) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) identified core climate vulnerabilities through 2040, including increased water stress; intens…

Including the Excluded: Improving Social Protection Services in the Dominican Republic

Challenge Between early 2003 and May 2004, approximately 15 percent of the Dominican population (1.4 million people) became poor, and about 6.5 percent (600,000 people) fell into extreme poverty, due to an economic and financial crisis in 2003 that undermined real incomes. With a recently established Social Cabinet mandated to monitor and oversee all social assistance and protection programs, the Dominican government committed itself in early 2007 to important reforms of its social assistance programs. Central to this effort was locating and providing documentation to poor people who were excluded from social services because they lacked proper identification papers. Strengthening the targeting of social programs, particularly the cash transfer program, was another goal. The government identified approximately 400,000 poor individuals eligible for social assistance programs (subsidized health insurance, cash transfers, and others), but who had been excluded for lack of legal identity papers. Approach The objective of the Social Protection Investment Project was to improve the coverage, targeting, and effectiveness of social protection programs in the Dominican Republic. These programs combined preventive, promotional, and active measures with the goal of improving the education and health investment (that is, the human capital development) of the poorest Dominicans. The project used a multisectoral approach to document excluded individuals by financing an active search for poor undocumented Dominicans and then guiding them through the process of obtaining their identification documents. The active search included the coordinated participation of the Social Cabinet’s institutions, the Central Electoral Council, and the municipalities to ensure the services were delivered to beneficiaries. This component used output-based financing. In addition, the project facilitated the introduction of improvements in the cash transfer program by confirming conditionalities in education and health that had not formerly been verified. The project supported improvements in the monitoring capacities of the education and health ministries involved, and it supported the design of a pilot for a community-based social audit mechanism (Community Report Cards) that was successfully expanded nationally by 2015. Finally, the project supported institutional development and strengthened the monitoring and evaluation capacities of the Social Cabinet, leading to improved targeting, updating the poverty status of the families registered in the Unified Beneficiary Identification System, and consolidating social programs.  

WB/Argentina: Greater Flood Protection in the Salado River Basin will benefit 1.4 million people

Washington April 7th, 2017 – More than 1.4 million people will benefit from a new loan approved yesterday by the World Bank Board of Directors for US$ 300million to strengthen flood protection in the Salado river basin within the Province of Buenos Aires. “For years we, Buenos Aires residents, have suffered every time it rains due to a decades-long lack of investment.  We are beginning to undertake works which will take time, the sort that won’t be seen in the short-term, but which will change people’s lives. Thanks to the World Bank’s input will be able to invest in improving the infrastructure and strengthening the economy of our Province,” said Maria Eugenia Vidal, governor of the Province of Buenos Aires. “This project is an example of World Bank support to Argentina to improve the standard of living of the population”, said World Bank Vice-president for Latin America and the Caribbean, Jorge Familiar. “We will continue working with the country to strengthen infrastructure and productivity, among other issues, so as to promote sustainable growth and job creation.” This loan is part of the “Salado Integrated River Basin Management Support Project”, which will finance works to adjust the river basin in order to contain rising waters and to minimize the impact of floods along 34 km of the middle course of the river and to enhance bridges so as to reduce risks to human life and economic activities. It will also finance the strengthening of institutional capacities for improved water resources management, protecting the environment, and supporting the sustainable management of infrastructure investments. The project will benefit the Basin’s entire population – 1.4 million people – and the structural work will directly and positively impact the populations in the districts of San Miguel de Monte, Lobos and Roque Pérez, an estimated 75,000 inhabitants. The Salado River Basin is situated in the central-northern part of the Province of Buenos Aires, and is of strategical importance not only to the regional economy, but also at a national level. The area’s agricultural production is responsible for 20 percent of national grains and meat production, contributing significantly to national export income. “We need more investment in infrastructure, not just to guarantee the wellbeing of the population, but also to develop a more competitive economy and to create genuine employment. For this reason, it’s fundamental that we have a strategic ally like the World Bank, who guarantees us the financing we need to grow,” said Luis Caputo, Minister for Finance in Argentina. Extreme climate events periodically and recurrently threaten the Province of Buenos Aires through floods and prolonged droughts. From 2000 to 2011, floods generated losses of US$ 4.5 billion and affected more than five million people in the Province. In 2015, the highest level of precipitation on record within the Salado River Basin caused flooding over more than 800,000 hectares, causing the death of over 6,000 cows and losses of over US$652 million. The project will be financed by a variable spread loan of US$300 million, with a 27.5-year total maturity period, including a 5-year grace period.

Mejorar la flexibilidad, calidad y equidad de la educación media superior en México

Desafío Los subsistemas que conforman la estructura de la educación media superior en México funcionaban de manera independiente y sin políticas nacionales claramente definidas. También faltaban mecanismos de control de calidad adecuados para garantizar la relevancia de la educación impartida y evitar transferencias excesivas, ineficaces o inapropiadas de estudiantes entre subsistemas. Esta falta de eficacia ayuda a explicar la elevada y persistente tasa de abandono (apenas se graduaba alrededor del 60 por ciento de los alumnos inscriptos en la EMS) y el bajo nivel de rendimiento y aprendizaje de estudiantes mexicanos. En 2008 apenas el 15,6 por ciento de los alumnos de 12.o grado obtuvo una nota considerada buena o excelente en la parte de matemáticas de la prueba estandarizada basada en el censo (ENLACE). La educación media superior se erigía así en uno de los principales cuellos de botella del sistema educativo: pocos estudiantes se estaban graduando, resultando en una falta de trabajadores capacitados. Preparar a la fuerza laboral mexicana para la economía del conocimiento demandaba un sistema educativo diferente —uno que hiciera hincapié en nuevas habilidades y capacidades analíticas y que respondiese a la demanda del sector productivo—. Enfoque Entre 2010 y 2016, con la serie de Préstamos Programáticos para Políticas de Desarrollo para la Educación Media Superior, el Banco Mundial brindó apoyo presupuestario general para el respaldo de reformas, creando la base institucional para el Sistema Nacional de Bachillerato (SNB). Esta serie de préstamos para políticas de desarrollo (DPL, por sus siglas en inglés) apoyó varias políticas clave tendientes a mejorar la calidad, pertinencia y equidad de la educación media superior en México, mientras que la participación del Banco en las reformas se tornó esencial a la hora de garantizar la continuidad de las políticas tras el cambio de administración y partido gobernante en diciembre de 2012. Además, la colaboración técnica entre el Banco y el gobierno ayudó a propiciar reformas basadas en evidencia y mejores prácticas internacionales. Por ejemplo, una evaluación de impacto proporcionó información útil para mejorar la focalización de las becas en los pobres. Asimismo, la asistencia técnica “justo a tiempo” ayudó a superar algunos de los obstáculos enfrentados durante la implementación de la reforma; por ejemplo, las recomendaciones de los talleres sobre mejores prácticas internacionales de enseñanza derivaron en mejoras cruciales en el diseño del Programa de Formación Docente introducido con la reforma. 

Promoting Sustainable Development in Brazil’s Pampa Biome

Challenge The grasslands of the Pampa biome in Brazil’s Rio Grande do Sul State support high levels of biodiversity, and the area is considered one of the most globally significant for endemic birds. It occupies 176,496 square kilometers, 63 percent of the state’s total area (and 2.07 percent of Brazil’s total area). These natural grasslands provide forage for approximately 18 million animals, mainly cattle and sheep, and livestock production is a primary economic activity in the biome. In recent decades, the area has gone through a process of intense land use change and degradation as natural vegetation has been replaced by rice paddies, soybean fields, and forests of alien species. The Pampa consequently became the second most devastated biome in Brazil. In 2009, only 35.6 percent of its natural vegetation remained, leading to losses of both biodiversity and socioeconomic opportunities. Consequently, the Rio Grande do Sul government recognized the complex issue of the interaction between agriculture and biodiversity conservation to be a central development and conservation challenge. Approach The goal established for the Rio Grande do Sul Biodiversity Project was to contribute to the protection of natural habitats and biological diversity through the following activities: •  Strengthening state policies and the operational capacity of the institutions charged with environmental management and rural development. •  Strengthening the system of state protected areas. •   Promoting sustainable practices by rural producers in the cattle ranching and forestry sectors that, when integrated into agricultural activities, lead to reversion of marginal agricultural areas to forest. • Increasing knowledge about biodiversity conservation and sustainable rural production systems in the Pampa biome to provide a sound scientific basis for developing a strong regulatory framework for the control of invasive alien species and the restoration and conservation of relevant sites and indigenous species. Though this was a pilot project, the strategy intended to support a small number of landholdings and demonstration units as a basis for strong outreach and dissemination activities to educate potential beneficiaries on sustainable practices.

Enhancing Access and Quality of Justice Services in Peru

Challenge Despite advances in criminal procedural reform and more transparent processes, lack of access to justice was a fundamental challenge in Peru. The costs of accessing justice services was high, including formal costs such as attorneys’ and court fees and informal ones such as bribes paid and opportunity costs for time invested in the process. Another challenge was the limited technical capabilities and professionalization of staff at the judiciary and in the Attorney General’s Office, as no permanent system existed to select, evaluate, train, or remove judges and prosecutors. Related challenges to professional development were weak accountability mechanisms and inefficiencies in judicial processes. Finally, the gradual implementation of the new criminal procedural code (NCPC) required coordination and close cooperation among the central stakeholders, including the judiciary, the Ministry of Justice (MINJUS), the Attorney General’s Office, the Judicial Academy, and the National Judicial Council. Approach The World Bank’s 2007–11 Country Partnership Strategy for Peru identified as an essential pillar the modernization of state institutions, with special focus on improving justice and reducing corruption. Additionally, improving access to justice (understood as both having the opportunity to present claims before a competent authority and receiving a timely process) ­­was one of the government’s main priorities. The Justice Services Improvement II Project sought to improve the quality of service delivery of the institutions forming part of the Justice Service Administration System and to enhance access to justice services. Overall, project activities targeted improved justice services delivery, strengthened managerial capabilities of justice-sector institutions, and enhanced transparency and access to justice.   

Improving Flexibility, Quality and Equity in Upper Secondary Education in Mexico

Challenge The subsystems comprising Mexico’s upper secondary educational structure worked independently and without clearly defined national policies. Also lacking were adequate quality assurance mechanisms to guarantee the relevance of the education provided and to avoid excessive, ineffective, or inappropriate transfers of students between subsystems. These gaps in efficacy help explain the persistently high dropout rate (only about 60 percent of students enrolled in USE graduated) and the low levels of achievement and learning among Mexican students. In 2008 only 15.6 percent of the students in 12th grade scored at levels considered good or excellent on the mathematics portion of the census-based standardized test (ENLACE). Upper secondary education represented a major bottleneck in the education system: few students were graduating, leading to a lack of skilled workers. Preparing Mexico’s workforce for the knowledge economy required a different kind of education system — one that emphasized new competencies and analytical ability and responded to the demands of the productive sector. Approach Between 2010 and 2016, with the Series of Programmatic Development Policy Loans on Upper Secondary Education, the World Bank provided general budgetary support to back up reforms creating the institutional basis for the National Upper Secondary Education System (Sistema Nacional de Bachillerato, SNB).  The development policy loan (DPL) series supported key policy actions to improve the quality, relevance, and equity of upper secondary education in Mexico, and Bank engagement in the reforms proved essential to guaranteeing policy continuity through the changes in ruling party and administration in December 2012. In addition, the technical collaboration between the Bank and the government helped foster reforms based on evidence and international best practices. For instance, an impact evaluation provided information useful in better targeting scholarships to the poor. In addition, just-in-time technical assistance helped overcome some obstacles faced during reform implementation; for example, workshop recommendations on international best teaching practices led to critical design improvements in the Programa de Formación Docentes, the teacher-training program introduced with the reform. 

Strengthening the Family and Community Health Care Model in Nicaragua

Challenge As in most resource-limited settings, the health of the population depends on equity and efficiency and on overcoming access gaps in the provision of healthcare services. In 2010, Nicaragua was one of the poorest countries in Latin America and the Caribbean. Between 2005 and 2010, the country experienced a slight reduction in maternal and infant mortality, with better control of transmissible diseases and improved immunization coverage. However, the health system continued to respond poorly to other health challenges, including the spread of H1N1 and dengue and the rise in non-communicable diseases, creating a double burden of disease. Through the introduction of health reform in the early 2000s, Nicaragua created a new Community and Family Health Model focused on universal access to basic health and nutrition services; health promotion and prevention; access to health services for vulnerable populations of indigenous residents, women, children, and the elderly; and community participation. Approach The Improving Community and Health Care Services Project (and its additional financing) was designed to support the Community and Family Health Model, and it aligned with Nicaragua’s 2009–11 National Human Development Plan (NHDP) and the World Bank’s 2008–12 and 2013–17 Country Partnership Strategies (CPS). The project’s interventions included introduction of the results-based financing mechanism in 66 municipalities; establishment of social contracts for well-being between administrative levels; results-based budgets at the hospital level; development and implementation of the National Strategy for Sexual and Reproductive Health; strengthened knowledge and skills bases for health workers; improved Ministry of Health (MOH) operational capacity at the central, regional, and local levels, including rehabilitation of health centers; maintenance and repair of medical equipment; and activation of a public health emergencies component. The project also effectively supported several policy goals articulated in the NHDP and CPS, including reducing maternal and child mortality and progressing toward the Sustainable Development Goals. It narrowed gaps in health service coverage and quality for vulnerable groups, and it implemented strategies for the better use of existing financial funds and health infrastructure. 

Improving Access to Education for the Poor in Haiti

Challenge With a GDP per person of US$673, Haiti is the poorest country in Latin America and the Caribbean and one of the poorest countries in the world. In the last several years, a series of external shocks have hit, including the 2010 earthquake, exacerbating the country’s fragility and reversing the poverty gains achieved since 2001. Haiti’s education sector faced tremendous challenges post-earthquake, including significantly diminished capacities for responding to them. The losses of schools, teachers, and staff from the Ministry of National Education and Professional Training (Ministère de l’Education Nationale et de la Formation Professionnelle, MENFP) compound the problems of a sector that already faced a shortage of schooling infrastructure, trained teachers, and effective governance mechanisms. On the supply-side, there were simply not enough spaces for children to enroll in free public schools, as four out of five primary schools in Haiti are private.  Tuition, even in the lowest-cost private schools, was prohibitive for poor families, especially for those living in rural areas characterized by poverty rates of 82 percent (77 percent living in extreme poverty). Although access to education has improved dramatically over the past twenty years, due to high demand from families and a proliferation of low-cost private schools, challenges still exist regarding late entry and school progression due to the cost burden on families and the relatively low quality of education. While 90 percent of children aged between 6 and 12 are enrolled in school, they start primary school on average two years later than national goals suggest, and once at school, only 50 percent of students successfully reach sixth grade on time. Approach The objective of Education for All Project for Haiti: Phase II is to support (i) enrollment of students in select non-public primary schools in disadvantaged areas; (ii) student attendance in select public and non-public primary schools in disadvantaged areas; and (iii) strengthened management of the Haiti’s primary education sector.  Project financing aims at (i) improving access to primary education through the tuition waiver program and provision of basic educational services in underserved rural communities; (ii) supporting teaching and learning through a school health and nutrition program, as well as through pre-service and in-service training for primary school teachers; and (iii) improving sector management by building the institutional and monitoring and evaluation capacity of the MENFP

Peru: UNICEF-WASH Cluster Coordinator-P4-Lima, Peru

Organization: CANADEM
Country: Peru
Closing date: 18 Apr 2017

CANADEM is seeking seasoned, Spanish-speaking professionals with previous relevant experience with WASH Cluster Coordination who are available for an immediate deployment to Lima, Peru as a seconded expert with UNICEF for a 3 month contract.

Position Title: WASH Cluster Coordinator
level: P4
Location: Lima, Peru
Duration: 3 months
Receiving Agency: UNICEF

BACKGROUND
The cluster approach ensures clear leadership, predictability and accountability in international responses to humanitarian emergencies by clarifying the division of labour among organizations and better defining their roles and responsibilities within the different sectors of the response. It aims to make the international humanitarian community better organised and more accountable and professional, so that it can be a better partner for the affected people, host governments, local authorities, local civil society and resourcing partners

In the past few days, “El Niño Costero” has continued to cause heavy rains and flooding across large parts of Peru. The disaster has affected more than 1 million people, which includes over 350,000 children. The most severely affected districts are Piura, Lambayeque, La Libertad and Lima Metropolitana. The Government has added Tumbes on the northern border of Peru with Ecuador to the areas where needs assessments are taking place.

Humanitarian needs are wide-ranging. Thus far it is estimated that 29,000 houses and dwellings have been destroyed or collapsed, affecting at least 120,000 people who are in immediate need for alternative shelter and other types of assistance. There are reports of many children and families living in unofficial shelters which are unlikely to meet basic needs, including water, sanitation and hygiene.
Many more people in the affected areas have no access to clean water and there is concern that levels of personal hygiene and sanitation are low, increasing risks of disease outbreaks, including acute diarrhea, dengue and Zika virus. UNICEF Peru is responding to the crisis and is actively supporting the Government to protect those affected and will concentrate its response to the needs of children in the most affected areas. An integrated approach will be conducted, providing Protection; Water; Sanitation; Hygiene; Nutrition and Health; Education. Technical assistance will be provided to the line Ministries involved, and to regional and local governments in order to strengthen their coordination and response capacities targeting children and adolescents. Direct assistance, through implementing partners, to affected girls, boys and adolescents in the targeted areas will also be supplied.

RESPONSIBILITIES
The post holder has joint responsibility with the Cluster Lead Agency, resourcing partners and all cluster participants at the national and sub-national level for the efficient management and functioning of the WASH Cluster encompassing the following:

Inclusion of key humanitarian partners:

  • Ensure inclusion of key WASH humanitarian partners in a way that respects their mandates and programme priorities;
  • Act as focal point for inquiries on the WASH cluster’s response plans and operations;

Establishment and maintenance of appropriate humanitarian coordination mechanisms:

  • Ensure appropriate coordination between all WASH humanitarian partners (national and international NGOs, the International Red Cross/Red Crescent Movement, etc…), through establishment/maintenance of appropriate WASH Cluster/sector coordination mechanisms, including working groups at the national and, if necessary, local level;
  • Secure commitments from WASH humanitarian partners in responding to needs and filling gaps, ensuring an appropriate distribution of responsibilities within the WASH group, with clearly defined focal points for specific issues where necessary;
  • Ensure the complementarity of different WASH humanitarian actors’ actions;
  • Promote WASH emergency response actions while at the same time considering WASH within early recovery planning as well as prevention and risk reduction concerns;
  • Ensure effective links with other Cluster/sector groups;
  • Ensure that WASH coordination mechanisms are adapted over time to reflect the capacities of local actors and the engagement of development partners;
  • Represent the interests of the WASH Cluster/sector in discussions with the Humanitarian Coordinator and other stakeholders on prioritization, resource mobilization and advocacy;

Coordination with national/local authorities, State institutions, local civil society and other actors:

  • Ensure that WASH humanitarian responses build on local capacities;
  • Ensure appropriate links with national and local authorities, State institutions, local civil society and other relevant actors and ensure appropriate coordination and information exchange with them.

Participatory and community-based approaches:

  • Ensure utilization of participatory and community based approaches in WASH related assessments, analysis, planning, monitoring and response.

Attention to priority cross-cutting issues:

  • Ensure integration of agreed priority cross-cutting issues in WASH assessments, analysis, planning, monitoring and response (e.g. age, diversity, environment, gender, HIV/AIDS and human rights);

Needs assessment and analysis:

  • Ensure effective and coherent WASH assessment and analysis, involving all relevant partners
  • Maintain information on all current and potential WASH partners, their capacities and areas of work (including Who, What , Where and by When) through effective integration with Agriculture Project Information System ( APIS) and OCHA

Emergency preparedness:

  • Ensure adequate WASH related contingency planning and preparedness for potential significant changes in the nature of the emergency;

Planning and strategy development:

  • Ensure predictable WASH action within;
  • WASH assessment and analysis; development (adaptation of generic standards) of standard assessment formats;
  • Identification of gaps in the field of WASH and conceptualize how sectoral needs can be met through collective delivery
  • Developing/updating agreed WASH response strategies and action plans and ensuring that these are adequately reflected in the overall country strategies, such as the Common Humanitarian Action Plan (CHAP) an integral component of the CAP process.
  • Drawing lessons learned from past WASH activities and revising strategies and action plans accordingly;
  • Developing an exit, or transition, strategy for the WASH interventions and key Cluster/sector partners.

Application of standards:

  • Ensure that WASH cluster/sector participants are aware of relevant policy guidelines, technical standards and relevant commitments that the Government/concerned authorities have undertaken under international human rights law;
  • Ensure that WASH responses are in line with existing policy guidance, technical standards, and relevant Government human rights legal obligations.

Monitoring and reporting:

  • Ensure adequate monitoring mechanisms are in place (with OCHA support) to review impact of WASH interventions and progress against implementation plans. This specifically needs to include an analytical interpretation of best available information in order to benchmark progress of the emergency response over time. That is – monitoring indicators (quantity, quality, coverage, continuity and cost. Target population data including desegregation by sex, age etc…) of service delivery which are derived from working towards meeting previously defined standards.
  • Ensure adequate WASH impact reporting and effective information sharing (with OCHA support) to demonstrate the closing of gaps.

Advocacy and resource mobilization:**

  • Identify core WASH advocacy concerns, including resource requirements, and contribute key messages to broader advocacy initiatives of the HC, UNICEF and other actors;
  • Advocate for donors to fund WASH actors to carry out priority WASH activities in the sector concerned, while at the same time encouraging WASH actors to mobilize resources for their activities through their usual channels.

Training and capacity building:

  • Promote and support training of WASH humanitarian personnel and capacity building of humanitarian partners, based on the mapping and understanding of available capacity;
  • Support efforts to strengthen the WASH capacity of the national/local authorities and civil society.

Provision of assistance or services as a last resort:

  • Where critical gaps in addressing WASH priorities are identified the WASH Cluster Coordinator will:
  • Lobby for implementing humanitarian partners (including UNICEF WES) to address the gaps.
  • With advice/support from the HC and support from other humanitarian partners will advocate, as appropriate, on the adequate provision of resources and safe access.
  • If persistent gaps remain then with the full support of the UNICEF Country Representative will specifically request that the UNICEF WES Country Team to take action to fill the critical gaps through direct implementation action.

ACCOUNTABILITY
The post holder is accountable to:

  • UNICEF representative, who will in turn ensure that the post holder is provided with all necessary support and guidance, and that any issues that arise relating to “double-hatting” are addressed
  • WASH Cluster participants, who will in turn ensure that they deliver on their agreed minimum commitments (see IASC Reference Module for Cluster Coordination at the Country Level, November 2012)
  • WASH Cluster coordination team members, who will in turn support the post holder in line with their terms of reference
  • Inter-cluster coordination bodies established by the HCT/UNOCHA
  • Affected populations through agreed mechanisms

Accountability to the country representative/cluster coordinator, cluster participants, coordination team members and inter-cluster coordination bodies will be expressed in regular review meetings.

COMPETENCIES
Core competencies:

  • Understands the rationale behind Humanitarian Reform, its main components and recent developments including the Transformative Agenda.
  • Understands, uses and adapts the tools, mechanisms and processes developed as part of Humanitarian Reform
  • Communicates, works and networks effectively with a wide range of people to reach broad consensus on a well-coordinated response, and demonstrates leadership where required
  • Thinks and acts strategically and ensures that cluster activities are prioritised and aligned within an agreed strategy
  • Demonstrates commitment to the cluster and independence from employing organisation
  • Builds, motivates and leads the cluster coordination team

Technical competences :
Understands key technical issues for the cluster sufficiently well enough to be able to: engage with cluster participants; make full use of their experience and knowledge; guide strategy and plans; communicate and advocate on important issues

Languages:
The post holder will have at least CEFR level B1 in the following languages:

  • Spanish
  • English

QUALIFICATIONS & EXPERIENCE
Qualifications
University degree, preferably at an advanced level, in a subject area relevant to the cluster
Extensive work experience relevant to this post may be considered as a replacement for formal qualifications.
Formal training in cluster coordination an advantage

Experience
At least 7/10 years progressively responsible humanitarian work experience with UN and/or NGO, including programme management and/or coordination in the first phase of a major emergency response relevant to the cluster
Extensive work experience outside the humanitarian sector which is relevant to this post may be considered as a replacement for humanitarian experience.

How to apply:

If you have all of the above-mentioned skills, please register with CANADEM before contacting us. This can be done on our website at www.CANADEM.ca/register . Then send an email no later than the 18th of April, 11:59 pm EDT to pantiwa.naksomboon@CANADEM.ca with a Subject Line: «UNICEF-WASH Cluster Coordinator-Peru». In your email, please include an updated resume, date of availability, your current location, and a phone number where we can reach you.

Guatemala: Medical Program Manager

Organization: Mayan Families
Country: Guatemala
Closing date: 12 May 2017

Mayan Families, a 501.c.3 non-profit organization, provides opportunities and assistance to the indigenous and impoverished people of Guatemala through education and community development programs. We are located in Panajachel, Guatemala.

The Medical Program aims to provide primary health care to the clients we serve through the various Mayan Families programs. To support our ongoing efforts we are seeking a Medical Program Manager to help drive our program forward.

Responsibilities

Preventative Health Program Management

  • Serve as the primary coordinator for our Women’s Health, Well Child, and Diabetes Education programs

  • Create and manage comprehensive budgets for all programs

  • Run consistent monitoring and evaluation for all programs

  • Externally promote and fundraise for each program

Communications

  • Coordinate large campaigns with the communications department

  • Work with communications department to develop consistent messaging and branding for the program

  • Write regular blogs to highlight medical program (biweekly)

  • Produce regular, unique content for the communications team such as Facebook posts and news articles (weekly)

  • Collaborate with communications team and donor relations to develop fundraising campaigns and create unique content

  • Be the point of contact for external inquiries from private and public medical facilities, partner nonprofits and other potential institutions of interest

  • Manage communications with VIP donors

Program Development

  • Manage a list of potential grant-giving organizations

  • Develop grant-writing calendar and apply for grants throughout the year

  • Write grants for preventative health programs

  • Conduct constant monitoring and evaluation for the medical program throughout the year

  • Collaborate with accounting to create a comprehensive program budget for the year

Clinic support

  • Coordinate medication and equipment ordering in the clinic

  • Assist with implementation of electronic charting system and electronic inventory

  • Collaborate with clinic staff to improve the day-to-day functioning of the clinic

  • Coordinate schedule and activities of visiting medical professionals volunteering in the clinic

Other

  • Supervise and train interns and volunteers

  • Assist with tasks and duties as required sometimes working outside of the Medical Program

Required

  • Bachelor’s Degree or higher required. Preferred degrees include Public Health, Natural Sciences, Nursing, International Development, Non-Profit

  • Management or related fields. A Master’s in Public Health would be preferred.

  • Experience in the healthcare field and public health required.

  • Working knowledge of Excel

  • Experience living and working in a cross-cultural setting preferably in Latin America or with indigenous people.

  • Excellent communication skills both written and spoken in Spanish and English. Fluency in both languages required.

  • Strong writing skills- able to write compelling stories and communicate in a courteous, professional manner

  • Exceptional interpersonal skills with an ability to maintain a professional and friendly manner when working with donors, clients, staff and volunteers

  • Ability to work independently and as part of a team without close supervision

  • Flexibility- able to easily adapt to changing needs in a fast-paced work environment

  • Highly organized with strong administrative skills and an eye for detail

  • Ability to multi-task, meet critical deadlines, and provide excellent follow up

  • Willing to take initiative

Preferred

  • Understanding of social and economic issues facing indigenous Guatemalans.

  • Previous experience working or volunteering with a non-profit

  • Previous experience working with indigenous populations **

How to apply:

Interested applicants should send cover letter and resume to: hr@mayanfamilies.org

Please put «Medical Program Manager » in the subject line.

For more information please visit www.mayanfamilies.org