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BACKGROUND
UNICEF is gearing up to establish its next quadrennial Strategic Plan 20262029[1], as the current Strategic Plan 20222025 enters its final year in Accordingly, UNICEF Regional Offices will begin preparing new Regional Office Management Plans (ROM.
The current ROMP 20222025 for UNICEF Eastern and Southern Africa was prepared at the end of 2020 and early 2021 amid the coronavirus19 pandemic and UNICEF’s global response to counter what remains one of the biggest challenges of our time. Four years on, while the pandemic has subsided, the region’s challenges are many: increasing number of children living in extreme poverty; slow pace of reduction in child mortality rates and in immunization coverage; stagnation in reducing stunting rates; global epicentre of the AIDS epidemic with disproportionate burden of new HIV infections among young girls and women; alarming learning crisis; high prevalence of violence against children and women; and low coverage of basic sanitation. Structural challenges such as the continent’s demographic pressure, debt crisis and inflation, severe adverse impacts of climate change and multiple conflicts continue to constrain great efforts of the countries in the region to accelerate results for children against the Sustainable Development Goals (SDand targets.
The new UNICEF ESA ROMP will need reconfirm the UNICEF Regional Office’s accountabilities and valueproposition to best support, guide and oversee the work of UNICEF Country Offices in the region, taking the above set of challenging situations for children into account, while building on rich programmatic and operational experience and lessons learned from the current ROMP period as well as from the learnings and insights from across the world where UNICEF operates.
MAJOR DRIVERS THAT SHAPE THE NEW ROMP
There are a set of drivers that will guide and shape the new ESA ROMP and the way UNICEF ESARO will deliver its mandate.
Emerging thrust of the new Strategic Plan: While the new Strategic Plan and the new ROMP will be formulated, de facto, in parallel, ESARO will closely follow the evolving discourse of the new Strategic Plan design, which will define the highlevel priorities, goals and common approaches of the organization in the remaining years of the SDG period. Conceptual agility and flexibility will be needed to build the ROMP aligned with the architecture of the new Strategic Plan, while the latter will evolve throughout the ROMP preparation period.
Corporate commitment to accelerate SDGs for children and the Global Effectiveness Review: The new strategic plan, at its core, will be about sharper focus and prioritization to ensure meaningful contribution of UNICEF to the countries’ SDG acceleration. The global leadership deliberations on this during the current Strategic Plan has been called Global Effectiveness Review (GEas part of the GMT since The new ESA ROMP planning will take into consideration the GER deliberations and related analytics as shared bigpicture programming insights.
Africa Strategy – UNICEF’s contribution to Africa’s SDG acceleration: The new ROMP preparation for three UNICEF Regional Offices that cover Africa will have an exciting backdrop of UNICEF Executive Board endorsement of UNICEF’s Contribution to Africa’s Development Agenda. Regional Office accountabilities and valueadd will take on an intentional and clear continental outlook, where programming in Africa will be framed and anchored against Africa’s own ambitions, goals and instruments, with significantly elevated partnership outlook visàvis the African Union. ESARO has a special opportunity to reflect its strategic positioning befitting this new and ambitious continental outlook.
Collaboration for Children: C4C (a set of shared regional priorities for UNICEF ESAwas adopted subsequent to the current ROMP and has become a vehicle to galvanize all UNICEF staff in the region around two flagships of ‘Learning’ and ‘Climate Adaptation’, and is likely to have continued relevance, along with five focus areas[2] of unfinished business. The new ROMP establishment will need to review how such regionally shared priorities can be more effectively used by ESARO to provide technical assistance to the countries in the region.
Business model review: The global business model review and its evolving discussion is particularly important for Regional Offices, as they relate to how best UNICEF should utilize its global technical assets – such as the Global Technical Teamsto support countries to deliver results for children. UNICEF ESAR is actively participating in these deliberations, with its own learning lab established on shared technical support around food systems strengthening for a group of middleincome countries in southern Africa. While the business model review is still an evolving global discussion, the ROMP discussion of how ESARO delivers its accountabilities must be informed by and accompanied with the global business review conversation.
Prospects of decreasing/earmarked funding: The global fundraising outlook suggests that it will be challenging to continue achieving yearonyear increases in resources mobilized. Given the current geopolitical context, an increasing earmarking of contributions can be expected, despite UNICEF’s largescale advocacy for flexible funding. This requires a sharpened focus on affordability, and as maintained in the Programme Budget Review (PBof the current ROMP and its midterm review, a strategic approach to ESARO’s fitforpurpose.
PURPOSE OF THE ASSIGNMENT
This consultancy assignment aims at supporting the UNICEF ESARO undertake the preparation of the ROMP 20262029 and the related budget submission to global PBR in/around April 2025, under direct supervision of the Deputy Regional Directors and overarching guidance of the Regional Director.
MAIN RESPONSIBILITIES
DELIVERABLES
Task | Deliverable | Indicative Timeframe | Attributable cost |
|
Summary note of desk review
|
3 days | 2% |
|
Inception report including
ROMP Roadmap ROMP Outline Communication Plan |
2 days | 3% |
|
Organization & facilitation of SMR
34 pager SMR Report |
4 days | 7% |
|
Summary note of consultations | 12 days | 20% |
|
23 pager summary note of consultations | 5 | 8% |
|
Short 5–6page executive brief
|
4 days Advertisement
|
10% |
|
Draft ROMP | 10 days | 20% |
|
Affordability analysis of ROMP
|
5 days | 15% |
|
Internal newsletters (title TB | 1 day | 5% |
Prepare final draft ROMP | Final draft ROMP | 4 days | 10% |
Total | 50 days | 100% |
PAYMENT SCHEDULE
Payments will be based on quality deliverables cleared by the Deputy Regional Director, supervisor of the consultancy, to be invoiced as per the details in the previous section. No more than one payment will be processed per month to reduce transaction cost of processing, so all activities and related deliverables for the month must be combined into a single invoice for payment processing.
Conditions
MANAGEMENT
The consultant will work under broad guidance and direction of the ESA Regional Director and day to day supervision of the Deputy Regional Director. The consultant will also interact with the ESARO ROMP reference group, composed of a number of Regional Advisors and select Representatives of the region, for broad steer and consultation.
QUALIFICATIONS AND SPECIALISED KNOWLEDGE/EXPERIENCED REQUIRED
ADMINISTRATIVE ISSUES
The work will be performed remotely/homebased and include one mission to Nairobi to facilitate a moment of reflection with ESARO staff
CONDITIONS
The consultant selected will be governed by, and subject to, UNICEF’s General Terms and Conditions for individual contracts. The work can be performed remotely/homebased. All products and data developed and collected for this agreement are the intellectual property of UNICEF. The consultant(may not publish or disseminate the final report, or any other document produced from this work without the express permission and acknowledgement of UNICEF.
HOW TO APPLY
Qualified candidates are requested to submit the following documents:
[2] Focus Areas: (1) Addressing maternal, neonatal and underfive mortality through primary health care. (2) Reducing stunting in early childhood. (3) (4) Ending violence against girls, boys and women. Ending AIDS among children and adolescents, while improving SRHR. (5) Expanding national cash transfer programmes and cashplus approaches to address multidimensional child poverty.
For every Child, you demonstrate…
UNICEF’s values of Care, Respect, Integrity, Trust, Accountability, and Sustainability (CRITA.
To view our competency framework, please visit here.
UNICEF is here to serve the world’s most disadvantaged children and our global workforce must reflect the diversity of those children. The UNICEF family is committed to include everyone, irrespective of their race/ethnicity, age, disability, gender identity, sexual orientation, religion, nationality, socioeconomic background, or any other personal characteristic.
UNICEF offers reasonable accommodation for consultants/individual contractors with disabilities. This may include, for example, accessible software, travel assistance for missions or personal attendants. We encourage you to disclose your disability during your application in case you need reasonable accommodation during the selection process and afterwards in your assignment.
UNICEF has a zerotolerance policy on conduct that is incompatible with the aims and objectives of the United Nations and UNICEF, including sexual exploitation and abuse, sexual harassment, abuse of authority and discrimination. UNICEF also adheres to strict child safeguarding principles. All selected candidates will be expected to adhere to these standards and principles and will therefore undergo rigorous reference and background checks. Background checks will include the verification of academic credential(and employment history. Selected candidates may be required to provide additional information to conduct a background check.
Only shortlisted candidates will be contacted and advance to the next stage of the selection process.