Consultancy, Disaster Law - Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Ecuador
El Salvador | Guatemala City | Quito
- Organization: IFRC - International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
- Location: El Salvador | Guatemala City | Quito
- Grade: Consultancy - Consultant - Contractors Agreement
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Occupational Groups:
- Legal - Broad
- Security policy
- Humanitarian Aid and Coordination
- Disaster Management (Preparedness, Resilience, Response and Recovery)
- Closing Date: Closed
Organizational Context
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) is the world’s largest humanitarian organization, with a network of 191-member National Societies (NSs). The overall aim of the IFRC is “to inspire, encourage, facilitate, and promote at all times all forms of humanitarian activities by National Societies with a view to preventing and alleviating human suffering and thereby contributing to the maintenance and promotion of human dignity and peace in the world.” The IFRC works to meet the needs and improve the lives of vulnerable people before, during and after disasters, health emergencies and other crises.
IFRC is part of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement (Movement), together with its member National Societies and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). The work of the IFRC is guided by the following fundamental principles: humanity, impartiality, neutrality, independence, voluntary service, unity, and universality. IFRC through its Disaster Law and Auxiliary role program is a leader in developing and disseminating guidance on best practice for disaster risk governance and the national societies’ auxiliary role.
IFRC has five regional offices in Africa, Asia Pacific, Middle East and North Africa, Europe, and the Americas, the latest comprising thirty-four countries throughout its network of eight country cluster/offices.
The IFRC’s approach to collectively reducing the current and future humanitarian impacts of climate change is informed by its Strategy 2030 which places climate change and environmental crises as one the key challenges to be addressed in the coming decade. As part of this holistic approach the Early Warnings for All initiative (EW4All) launched by the UN Secretary-General in November 2022 at the COP27 meeting in Sharm El-Sheikh, calls for every person on Earth to be covered by an early warning system by the end of 2027. The evidence is clear: early warning and early actions systems are one of the most effective risk reduction and climate adaptation measures to reduce disaster mortality and economic losses.
The IFRC’s approach to collectively reducing the current and future humanitarian impacts of climate change is informed by its Strategy 2030 which places climate change and environmental crises as one the key challenges to be addressed in the coming decade. As part of the IFRC’s holistic approach the Early Warnings for All initiative (EW4All) launched by the UN Secretary-General in November 2022 at the COP27 meeting in Sharm El-Sheikh, calls for every person on Earth to be covered by an early warning system by the end of 2027. The evidence is clear: early warning and early actions systems are one of the most effective risk reduction and climate adaptation measures to reduce disaster mortality and economic losses.
Half of countries globally do not have adequate early warning/early actions systems and even fewer have regulatory frameworks to link early warnings/early actions to preparedness and emergency plans. Early warning systems have proven to be a cost-effective and reliable solution to protect lives and livelihoods from natural hazards such as floods, heatwaves, storms and tsunamis. The Global Status Report (2022) reveals that countries with substantive-to-comprehensive early warnings coverage have disaster mortality eight times lower than countries with limited coverage.
Job Purpose
IFRC seeks a Disaster Law consultant to support the inter pillar work on policy development relating to the Early Warning for All Initiative (EW4All). Integrating early warning and early action mechanisms considering climate change and environmental approach into existing DRM laws and policies for enhancing Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Ecuador’s preparedness and response capabilities.
The Consultant will support IFRC to gain an enhanced understanding of specific disaster risk governance (law, policies and other regulations) within the context of the of the EW4All initiative in order to better understand the opportunities for strengthening early warning systems and early action processes through law, policies and other regulations. Specifically, the consultant is expected to:
Assess the current disaster risk governance, including at local levels
Identify gaps and limitations in integrating early warning and early action mechanisms.
Recommend actionable steps for enhancing the integration of early warning and early action in the disaster risk governance frameworks
Job Duties and Responsibilities
Outcomes
The outcome of the consultancy is for IFRC to have furthered its research on Disaster risk governance in Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Ecuador to identify the recommended actions necessary to strengthen the national frameworks to better integrate the functional and effective early warning/early actions systems into the national disaster risk governance.
Consultancy Outputs
This consultancy is intended to support IFRC with the following deliverables:
1. Conduct and prepare a comprehensive study on disaster risk governance taking into account the Early Warning for All initiative, the set of questions developed by the IFRC disaster law program on the matter and the IFRC climate resilience platform (Guatemala and Ecuador).
2. Conduct an update research on in early actions systems-anticipatory action framework in place in Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, including findings and recommendations for better preparation and response.
Education
Advanced degree in Law, Public Policy, Disaster Management, or a related field.
Experience
Minimum of 5 years of experience in DRM, law, and policy analysis, with a focus on early warning and early action
Knowledge, Skills and Languages
Required
Strong analytical, research, and report-writing skills. Excellent communication and stakeholder engagement abilities
Good level of acknowledge on country’s context and international best practices in disaster risk and climate change – environment law and policies
Fluent spoken and written in Spanish
Work command in English
Competencies, Values and Comments
Submission Requirements
Interested Consultants are invited to submit:
- A detailed proposal outlining the approach to achieving the objectives.
- Financial proposal, including a breakdown of costs.
- Curriculum Vitae (CVs) of the Consultant
- Examples of previous relevant work.