Internship – SPRINT Lessons Learnt Documentation

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The International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) was founded in 1952 and currently has 150 Member Associations (MAs) and Collaborative Partners with a presence in over 146 countries. IPPF is a global healthcare provider and a leading advocate of sexual and reproductive health and rights for all with the vision that all people are free to make choices about their sexuality and well-being, in a world free from discrimination. IPPF recognises that the achievement of the highest attainable standard of sexual and reproductive health is not possible when gender equality and human rights are not respected, protected and fulfilled.

As affirmed by the IPPF Strategy 2023- 2028, IPPF is now more focused than ever on expanding our reach to crisis affected populations –particularly women, girls and marginalized population- with SRH in emergencies services, including the Minimum Initial Service Package (MISP) developed by the Inter-Agency Working Group on Reproductive Health in Crises (IAWG). IPPF aims to continue supporting our local members to increase our reach in humanitarian settings and ensure rapid life-saving responses in high-risk countries. A locally led and feminist approach is central to this by engaging the existing expertise of Member Associations and partners and mobilising the energy of our youth volunteers.

The SPRINT initiative, Sexual Reproductive Health Programme in crisis and post-crisis situation, is a humanitarian flag-ship program funded by the Australian government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) and hosted by the International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF). SPRINT was designed to address gaps in Minimum Initial Service Package (MISP) implementation identified in a global evaluation undertaken by the Inter-Agency Working Group (IAWG) on Reproductive Health. The overall goal of the SPRINT program is to improve health outcomes of crisis-affected populations by reducing preventable sexual and reproductive health (SRH) morbidity and mortality. The programme’s purpose is to increase timely access for crisis-affected populations to lifesaving SRH services as outlined in the MISP.

Objective

The overall objective of this assignment is to document the lessons learnt, and factors leading to success or challenges in achieving the outcomes from the various Real-Time reviews (RTRs) and Post Emergency Reviews (PERs) conducted during the period of two and half (2.5) years from April 2022 to August 2024. The end product of this consultancy will be a concise document with key suggestions and recommendations from the RTRs, PERs and emergency response reports/ findings with strategic guidance for the IPPF and DFAT, reflecting on the best practices for future response support.

Specific objectives:

  • Review the existing SPRINT emergency response related reports including RTR, PER, one-month progress and Final Emergency Response reports. Document the key findings, suggestions, action-points, challenges, and best practices from these reports.
  • Drawing on the above documentation, provide strategic guidance on the lessons learnt and way forward to support future responses more effectively, both at the MA level and IPPF/ DFAT level.

Under the guidance of the Senior Monitoring & Evaluation Advisor – Humanitarian Programme, the Intern will work closely with the Humanitarian Senior Technical Advisors, Programme Officers, Project Managers across the IPPF Asia-Pacific offices (South-Asia, East South-East Asia & Oceania, and Pacific sub-office) and may reach out to IPPF staff and/ or specific MA/s for any clarification, key-informant interviews, or understanding any attributes, etc., based on the feasibility and requirement.

Key deliverables

The SPRINT-IV, a 3-year project, is concluding in December 2024. This document will complement the final SPRINT-IV report highlighting the insights and takeaways from the on-going support that was provided by the IPPF Humanitarian team to the MAs, specifically during the emergency response. It will showcase the tailored technical assistance provided, remote and on-site, proven successful strategies and failures for an effective response. This will document the value added, and act as evidence to build the IPPF institutional knowledge, especially for the SPRINT-IV costed extension to strengthen the Humanitarian programming.

The majority of this work will be undertaken via a desk-based document review and synthesis. IPPF requires this assignment to be completed by 15 Jan. 2025. Accordingly, we encourage the applicants to submit their Expression of Interest at the earliest.

Deliverable

A lessons learnt document reflecting on the findings from the various RTRs (8), PERs (4), one-month progress reports and final emergency response reports (12 responses). It should provide strategic insights, suggestion and recommendations based on thoughtful, rational reflections from the field (local context). The document should serve as a reference guide for the future strategic support to be provided to the MAs and add value to planning, preparedness, capacity building process, and recovery phase, both at MA and IPPF level, for the SPRINT-IV costed extension.

The consultant should review the following reports and/or other technical documents for the period specified:

  • RTR reports (8; 2022: Tonga, Solomon Islands; 2023: Pakistan, Indonesia, Vanuatu; 2024: Nepal, Thailand, Indonesia)
  • PER reports (4; 2022: Philippines; 2023: Indonesia, Vanuatu; 2024: Vanuatu)
  • One-month reports (13; 2022: Philippines, Tonga, Solomon Islands, Pakistan, Indonesia; 2023: Vanuatu, Yemen, Vanuatu, Sudan, Thailand, Nepal; 2024: Indonesia, Bangladesh)
  • Final Emergency Response reports (13; 2022: Philippines, Tonga, Solomon Islands, Pakistan, Indonesia; 2023: Vanuatu, Yemen, Vanuatu, Sudan, Thailand, Nepal; 2024: Indonesia, Bangladesh)

Specific Skills

  • At least 1-2 years of overall experience in reviewing programme/ projects, developing strategic documents, documentation, evaluation, desk review and preparation of strategic or technical reports.
  • Familiar with the sexual and reproductive health and/or sexual and gender-based violence programming, especially in humanitarian context would be desirable.
  • Experience of working in any Asia-Pacific country with sub-national or national level implementing partners to build their capacities, developing strategies, annual programming, providing technical assistance in the field would be desirable.
  • Pursuing or completing Masters from any of the University from Asia-Pacific country.

How to apply

Application process

Individual/s interested in this assignment should provide:

  • A cover letter (no more than one page) and CV outlining their experience against the requirements listed above, including examples of previous work in relation to the Terms of Reference.

Please submit your application to HAnnadorai@ippf.org with the subject “Internship – SPRINT Lessons learnt documentation”. Deadline for submission is 27 Dec 2024.

For more on the International Planned Parenthood Federation: http://www.ippf.org

To help us track our recruitment effort, please indicate in your email/cover letter where (tendersglobal.net) you saw this job posting.

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