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I General Information
Title: JPO Gender, Climate and Peace Analyst
Sector of Assignment: Women, Peace, Security, and Humanitarian Action Area team
Organization/Office: Country Office Colombia
Duty Station: Bogotá, Colombia
Duration of assignment: 2 years with possibility of extension for another year. The extension of appointment is subject to yearly review concerning priorities, availability of funds, and satisfactory performance.
Please note that for participants of the JPO-Programme two years work experience are mandatory! Relevant work experience can be counted. In order to assess the eligibility of the candidates, we review the relevant experience acquired after obtaining the first university degree (usually bachelor’s degree).
II. Organizational Context
UN Women, grounded in the vision of equality enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations, works for the elimination of discrimination against women and girls; the empowerment of women; and the achievement of equality between women and men as partners and beneficiaries of development, human rights, humanitarian action and peace and security.
The work of UN Women’s Country Office is guided by its Strategic Note (SN) 2022-2024 and responds to the priority areas established within the United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework (UNSDCF) for Colombia for the period of 2020 – 2023, which is in the process of being updated based on the new National Development Plan, established by the national government for the next 3 years.
Likewise, its strategy is in line with the national priorities expressed in several public policies framework, the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, and Strategic Plan 2022–2025. The SN is also aligned with international normative frameworks on gender equality and women’s rights, such as the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action and the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 and subsequent resolutions on women, peace and security, the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and will contribute to compliance with the observations and recommendations of the CEDAW Committee’s reports. It will also support the implementation of national regulations and public policies to guarantee women’s rights in the country.
Currently, there are six action fields to reinforce the protection of women’s rights in humanitarian, development, democratic governance, and peace-building contexts as a condition for its sustainability which are prioritized in the Women, Peace, Security and Humanitarian Action (WPS&HA) Area: Support of reintegration processes, the territorial peace initiatives, the women’s human rights defenders protection, the care of the civic space in the peacebuilding contexts, the support for transitional justice issues, and support for gender in humanitarian action.
Likewise, from the normative and coordination mandates, UN Women prioritizes the promotion of the Women, Peace, and Security agenda, the gender-based approach promotion in humanitarian action and development cooperation; standardizing gender-responsive post-conflict analysis, planning and financing; promoting gender-inclusive peace processes and negotiations, as well as the implementation of a gender-based approach of the peace agreements, and promoting gender mainstreaming in the security sector reform agenda.
However, under a common understanding that meaningful participation of women in all stages of peace processes, conflict prevention, conflict resolution, and peacebuilding is one of the essential factors for the maintenance and promotion of international peace and security, including in the context of climate change, environmental degradation, and disasters, UN Women’s role should be key also, to encourage an increase of the full, meaningful, and equal participation of women in climate action and to promote global, regional and local initiatives to strengthen the links among the climate, human security, peace, and gender equalities.
In Colombia, for example, socio-environmental conflicts involve the interests of all actors in the territory, such as non-state armed groups that exert pressure on communities to preserve their illegal activities; legal and illegal private actors linked to the exploitation of natural resources; and peasant communities and ethnic peoples who want to protect the land, but also to have access to livelihoods and production.
Women environmental defenders in the country advance their agendas in these contexts of risk for their lives, their integrity and that of their organizational processes, families, and communities; as well as risks for the exercise of their citizenship, threatening – even – their role as caretakers of the territory. When the environmental conflicts intersects with the armed conflict, and gender and social inequalities, the women defenders face at least five risks in the middle of their work: control and violence by organized environmental crime and/or by non-state armed groups (NSAGs), food insecurity risks, livelihoods deterioration, confinement, displacement, and migration risks, infrastructural failure risk, and the risk of increase of health and infectious diseases.
Despite the described context, the peace process between the Colombian Government and the FARC-EP created the opportunity to “relate the construction of peace with the conditions, perspectives and needs of women as well as with the management of natural resources [and made it clear] (…) the need to carefully establish the limits of appropriation of natural resources, strengthen environmental democracy and incorporate environmental justice criteria that consider the particularities of women, men and youth, both urban and rural in the country (…), [showing the importance of] (…) reflecting the individual conditions and collective needs of women in the construction of alliances and mechanisms of environmental governance to resolve future conflicts”.
Hence, the importance of linking the implementation of the specific gender measures of the Final Peace Agreement with the approach of conflict prevention, the protection of environmental women defenders, the Total Peace Policy, and the National Development Plan 2023 – 2026 “Colombia, world power of life”, of the National Government.
Under the opportunity window described, to increase knowledge of the gender-specific impacts of climate-related peace and security risks, not only to strengthen the UN Women’s capacities and its strategic partnership-building skills for its mitigation and prevention; but also to promote within the country’s agenda the links among gender, climate, peace and security as a condition for sustaining peace, is also a key opportunity to contribute to the implementation of peace agreement in Colombia and the gender provisions relative to the comprehensive rural reform in link with the public policies on rural women.
Consequently, the support of a Gender, Climate and Peace Analyst is required, in order to support the entity’s efforts to strengthen and effectively respond to its mandate according to international normative frameworks in the matter and the CSW66 Agreed Conclusions (E/CN.6/2022/L.7) on achieving gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls in the context of climate change, environmental and disaster risk reduction policies and programmes.
III. JPO Programme Components
Title of Supervisor: Deputy Representative, under matrix coordination of the Officer in charge of the WPS&HA Area
Content and methodology of supervision:
Evaluation:
Training components:
Learning components:
IV. Functions
Specifically, to support donor relations with the German Government and the German Embassy in Colombia, related to the project financed by the German Government in support of environmental defenders and its contributions to the Women’s Peace and Humanitarian Fund, and relating to the potential role of Germany in the donor round table on gender.
V. Key Performance Indicators
VI. Competencies
Core Values:
Core Competencies:
Functional Competencies:
VII. Recruitment Qualifications
Education and certification:
Experience:
Language Requirements:
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