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UNDP

Communications and Knowledge Management Analyst

Duties and Responsibilities

Structured facts

Closing: 2026-03-10

Updated: 2026-03-03

Country: Philippines

Structured facts

Category: UN

Country: Philippines

Duty station: Manila, Philippines

Contract type: National PSA- Regular

Grade: Post level NPSA-8

Posted: 2026-02-23

Updated: 2026-03-03

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UN
National PSA- Regular

Role overview

Duties and Responsibilities

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Background

Despite the landmark passage of the Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Act (IPRA), many Indigenous Cultural Communities/Indigenous Peoples (ICCs/IPs) continue to experience poverty, marginalization, and limited access to basic services and decision-making spaces. Women and girls remain disproportionately excluded due to entrenched sociocultural and institutional barriers that limit their leadership, control over and resources, and access to finance, training, digital tools, and economic opportunities. I-LEAD seeks to address these challenges by ‘affirming and strengthening the rights and leadership capacities of at least 1,600 indigenous women and girls across four ancestral domains of Regions XI and XII in Mindanao by 2030, through improved access to information, decision-making spaces, economic opportunities, and leadership roles within their ancestral domains’.

I-LEAD's Theory of Change posits that ‘if indigenous women and girls are equipped with the capacities, skills, and platforms to understand, assert, and exercise their rights, and if ancestral domain governance structures, national and local duty-bearers, and development partners adopt gender-responsive—inclusive-- and rights-based service delivery models, then indigenous women and girls will be positioned to meaningfully participate in governance and decision-making, access improved services, and engage in economic activities aligned with their cultural values and environmental realities’.

With support from the Government and in partnership with the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP), the Project will be implemented through three interlinked components:

  1. Strengthening Ancestral Domain Governance with Human Rights and Gender Perspectives;
  2. Promoting Gender-Equitable and Culturally Appropriate Economic Empowerment; and
  3. Enhancing the Capacity of the NCIP and other Stakeholders on Human Rights-Based, Gender Responsive, and Culturally Appropriate Po
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