Consultancy – Mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) and Child Marriage in Humanitarian Settings, Gender Human Rights and Inclusive Branch, Programme Division
United Nations Population Fund
Purpose of the consultancy: This consultancy will support the UNFPA’s response to the needs of adolescent girls in humanitarian settings, with a focus on providing mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) to adolescent girls at risk of child marriage or already married.1. BackgroundThis consultancy will support the UNFPA’s response to the needs of adolescent girls in humanitarian settings, with a focus on preventing and responding to child marriage among refugee girls.In 2024, nearly 300 million people required humanitarian assistance and protection, with one in four being women and girls of reproductive age who may need specialised sexual and reproductive health (SRH) and gender-based violence (GBV) services. Within these populations, adolescent girls are especially vulnerable, facing heightened risks including child, early, and forced marriage. Factors such as conflict, displacement, and economic instability often exacerbate these risks, as families may view child marriage as a coping mechanism during crises. Additionally, the lack of access to quality healthcare, education, and support services further increases vulnerability and, consequently, the likelihood of adolescent girls being subjected to violence and harmful practices.Despite growing recognition that child marriage is exacerbated in humanitarian contexts, it continues to be a low priority in humanitarian responses due to several interrelated barriers. A recent technical guide published by the UNFPA-UNICEF Global Programme to End Child Marriage highlighted some of these challenges: While child marriage is typically included within child protection and GBV frameworks, it is not comprehensively addressed, leading to fragmented coordination across sectors and an over reliance on reactive rather than proactive, preventative approaches. Additionally, insufficient funding for GBV and child protection programs limit the effectiveness of interventions, while the lack of reliable data hinders advocacy efforts and the implementation of effective strategies to prevent and mitigate child marriage in humanitarian settings.The evaluation of Phase 2 of the UNFPA-UNICEF Global Programme to End Child Marriage (2020-23) highlighted that “the Programme has been responsive to humanitarian, fragile and crisis contexts, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, but has yet to fully tailor […] programming strategies such as the gender-transformative approach, to humanitarian or nexus contexts”. It also pointed that “evidence generation on certain relevant themes and contexts, such as interventions in humanitarian contexts, and the impact of climate change on child marriage, has been limited”. The evaluation, therefore recommended “to make the Programme more agile and adaptive for humanitarian and other complex contexts”, highlighting that “a select set of good practices in adapting Global Programme tools and processes should be identified and made available to all Global Programme countries (and beyond)”.Similarly, the Global Formative Evaluation of UNFPA’s Support to Adolescents and Youth (2023) has recommended further enhancing each of the three dimensions of the Strategy My Body, My Life, My World based on evaluative evidence, including by building on UNFPA efforts in mental health and psychosocial support as it relates to its comparative advantage in adolescent sexual and reproductive health. This includes piloting initiatives addressing mental health that will complement existing UNFPA interventions, exploring opportunities to partner with other United Nations organizations, and ensuring the human capacity and expertise required to implement these activities are in place.Against the background above, UNFPA is developing a series of tools, resources, and guidance documents to enhance the provision of tailored services for adolescent girls in line with its global strategies on adolescents and youth and gender equality. This consultancy will contribute to this effort by developing an MHPSS toolkit. This tool will be developed through a comprehensive review of existing evidence-based guidance and best practices, and in consultation with key stakeholders including UNFPA regional and country offices, humanitarian actors, implementing partners, and youth- and women-led organizations. The MHPSS toolkit will provide practical strategies and recommendations for tailoring and integrating MHPSS into humanitarian programs, ensuring that adolescent girls receive the comprehensive support they need to thrive.2. DeliverablesThe consultant will deliver the following product:A toolkit for tailoring mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) services for adolescent girls in humanitarian settings, with a focus on displaced, refugee and on-the-move adolescent girls. The MHPSS toolkit should:
The toolkit will be developed based on a thorough review of existing evidence, tools, and resources, and consultations with key stakeholders and potential beneficiaries. The consultant should ensure that the guidance document is evidence-based, aligned with international standards, and adaptable to different humanitarian contexts.3. TasksTo deliver a high-quality product, the consultant is expected to carry out the following tasks:
4. Expected travelTravelling may be required and will be decided with the consultant.5. Duration of assignmentThe consultancy is expected to be completed in 40 days spanning approximately 3 months, starting on 15 February 2025 and ending no later than 30 April 2025.6. Required qualifications and experienceEducationAdvanced degree in a relevant field such as social sciences, public health, humanitarian studies, adolescents and youth development, education, psychology, gender-based violence, gender studies, or other related disciplines.Knowledge and experience:Minimum of 10 years of progressive experience in gender-based violence (GBV) in humanitarian contexts.
.7. Reporting and supervisionThe consultant will report to the Programme Advisor – Ending Child Marriage and Adolescent Girls Programming; and to the Programme Specialist, Ending Child Marriage.8. Proposed timeframe and payment schedulePayment will be per deliverable, after acceptance of deliverable by UNFPA.9. How to apply:Please send your CV with a cover letter and a financial proposal (daily rate) to Uliane Appolinario ( ), with the subject “Consultant MHPSS – Application”, by 2 January 2025.Related JobsPaginationBack to pageJobsFooter menu© All rights reserved 2024.Follow usJoin our mailing listWe use cookies and other identifiers to help improve your online experience. By using our website you agree to this, see our
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Sun, 08 Dec 2024 08:29:22 GMT
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