UN-HABITAT Urban Resilience Programme Specialist Jobs in Kenya
Background and Justification
The Southern African and South-West Indian Ocean regions are highly exposed to transboundary extreme climate-related events, floods, drought and cyclones. More threats exist in this region that compound the effects of these natural hazards, some of natural origin (such as earthquakes, volcanic activity, among others) and others induced by anthropogenic interventions, such as land and environmental degradation and uncontrolled urbanisation.
These events have resulted in loss of lives and livelihoods and displacement of millions of people. Furthermore, the unprecedented urban growth witnessed in the region has resulted in the progressive accumulation of risk in cities and towns, largely due to weak urban governance capacity to manage rapid expansion. Much of the population expansion has been taking place outside, or in the absence of, official planning frameworks.
As a result, large numbers of people satisfy their housing needs in informal settlements, often located in high-risk areas exposed to a range of natural and human-induced hazards. Urban risks are exacerbated by the increasing severity and unpredictability of climate change effects. In response, through its Regional Office for Africa (ROAf), UN-Habitat has developed an extensive portfolio of work on disaster risk reduction, climate change adaptation and urban resilience in Sub-Saharan Africa, including normative, policy-level and practical infrastructure interventions at the regional, national and city-levels.
At the request of Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique and the Union of Comoros, UN-Habitat has facilitated since 2010 the establishment of the Technical Centre for Disaster Risk Management, Sustainability and Urban Resilience (DiMSUR), which was launched in 2013. DiMSUR acts a regional centre of excellence for issues related to urban climate resilience and disaster risk. Together, UN-Habitat and DiMSUR have developed the City Resilience Action Planning (CityRAP) Tool with the main objective of enabling local governments of small to intermediate sized cities (or urban districts of bigger cities) to understand risks and plan practical actions to progressively build urban resilience.
In 2020, building on four CityRAP participatory resilience planning processes implemented between 2015 and 2017 in the cities of Morondava (Madagascar), Zomba (Malawi), Chokwe (Mozambique), and Moroni (Union of Comoros), UN-Habitat launched the project “Building Urban Climate Resilience in South-Eastern Africa”, or the (SEA) project, which aims at strengthening urban climate resilience in those countries/cities that are similarly vulnerable to common transboundary extreme climate-related events.
UN-Habitat and UNDP are jointly implementing a 2-year project funded by ECHO titled “Strengthening all-inclusive Disaster Preparedness and linking Early Warning to Early Action in Mzuzu, Blantyre, Lilongwe, and Zomba City Councils”. The project aims to enhance disaster preparedness and response capacity in 4 major cities in Malawi through risk assessments, early warning systems, contingency planning, prepositioning of supplies, and capacity building.
The intervention from the Flemish Department of Foreign Affairs in Malawi historically consisted mostly the support of agricultural developments. As the rural areas are currently undergoing a rapid pace of urbanization, the FDFA has included in the strategy for the coming years to also support projects that include the urban development of rural “secondary cities”. The FDFA Representation has indicated a demand for the city of Kasungu to develop into a low-carbon and climate resilient city, safeguarding the further economic development of agricultural activities around the city while strengthening the urban master plan.
UN-Habitat has recently been approached by the government FDFA to co-develop a proposal on a low-carbon development approach in a rapidly urbanizing context for Kasungu City, Malawi. UN-Habitat has begun developing a Regional Climate Change Strategy for Sub-Saharan Africa, which will provide a framework
to guide climate action in the region. The Climate Change Strategy, aims to provide a clear roadmap for addressing climate-related issues in the region and to align its projects with the goal of mitigating risks, protecting vulnerable communities, promoting sustainable development, ensuring future prosperity, and fulfilling international commitments.
By integrating climate considerations into development plans and advocating for sustainable practices, a vital role will be played in coordinating a united response to the challenges posed by climate change in Sub-Saharan Africa. This strategy will serve as a foundation for generating ideas, creating project documents, and identifying opportunities for collaborative efforts.
The Southern Africa Development Community (SADC) Secretariat in collaboration with key partners; the International Federation and Red Crescent for the Red Cross (IFRC), the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) and the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN Habitat) is implementing the Disaster Risk Management Strengthening in SADC (DRMSS) Project from 2022 to 2026. The Project is being financed by the European Union under the 11th European Development Fund (EDF) Intra-African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States (ACP) Natural Disaster Risk Reduction Programme (NDRRP).
The intervention will contribute towards the achievement of the outputs of the NDRRP, namely: (i) Output 1.1: ACP Regional Institutions Capacities are strengthened; (ii) Output 1.3: Integrated solutions for risk-informed development planning and budgeting are provided; (iii) Output 2.3: Urban and Peri-Urban resilience mechanisms are improved in targeted cities; and (iv) Output 3.2: Communities and local stakeholders are more risk aware and able to take action that reduces risk.
Duties and Responsibilities
Under the overall supervision of the Human Settlements Officer at the Regional Office for Africa (ROAf), the consultant will carry out the following duties and responsibilities:
Qualifications/special skills
Languages
How to Apply
For more information and job application details, see; UN-HABITAT Urban Resilience Programme Specialist Jobs in Kenya
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