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Requires advanced university degree and 8+ years of experience in writing, editing, policy analysis, and facilitating workshops on climate change and social services. English language proficiency required.
Last checked: 3 hours ago
Closing date: Wednesday, 8 July 2026
Country: Cambodia
Duty station: Cambodia
Contract type: Consultant
Grade: Not specified
Applicant eligibility: Not explicit in source
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Contract Duration – 2 months
Working arrangement: Remote with travel to Cambodia
UNICEF works in over 190 countries and territories to save children’s lives, defend their rights, and help them fulfill their potential, from early childhood through adolescence.
At UNICEF, we are committed, passionate, and proud of what we do for as long as we are needed. Promoting the rights of every child is not just a job – it is a calling.
UNICEF is a place where careers are built. We offer our staff diverse opportunities for professional and personal development that will help them reinforce a sense of purpose while serving children and communities across the world. We welcome everyone who wants to belong and grow in a diverse and passionate culture, coupled with an attractive compensation and benefits package.
Visit our website to learn more about what we do at UNICEF.
TERMS OF REFERENCE
The social service workforce (SSW) is a cornerstone of an effective child protection system and plays a critical role in protecting children from violence, abuse, neglect, exploitation, and other protection concerns. A competent and well-supported workforce ensures that children and families can access timely, quality services and support. In Cambodia, social work remains a relatively young profession. There is currently no mandated body responsible for regulating social work education and ensuring compliance with national and regional standards. Most short- and medium-term training programmes are delivered on an ad hoc basis by government and non-government actors, resulting in fragmented and insufficiently coordinated capacity development efforts. To address these challenges, UNICEF has supported the Government to develop a standardized social service workforce curriculum and training packages, which have now been finalized and are being rolled out nationally.
At the same time, Cambodia is increasingly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, including floods, droughts, extreme weather events, and climate-induced displacement. These hazards can exacerbate existing vulnerabilities and heighten risks to children, including family separation, violence, exploitation, child labour, trafficking, psychosocial distress, and disruptions to essential services. Children living in poverty, children with disabilities, and other vulnerable groups are often disproportionately affected. The ASEAN Regional Guidance for Member States on the Role of Social Workers and the Wider Social Service Workforce in Disaster Risk Reduction and Climate Resilience recognizes these challenges and highlights the critical role of social service workers in disaster risk reduction, climate adaptation, emergency preparedness, and resilience-building. Beyond responding to immediate protection concerns, social service workers are increasingly required to identify climate-related risks, support vulnerable households before, during, and after disasters, facilitate access to social protection and essential services, strengthen community resilience, and ensure that child protection considerations are integrated into climate and disaster response efforts.
In line with Cambodia's commitment to operationalize the ASEAN Guidance and its climate resilience agenda, which identifies child protection as a priority adaptation sector under the Third Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC 3.0), the National Institute of Social Affairs (NISA) has begun integrating climate change considerations into social service workforce development. With support from UNICEF, a pilot training for selected social service workers was delivered in November 2025 with a view to strengthening their capacity to integrate child protection into disaster risk management and climate action, promote climate adaptation approaches, and enhance preparedness, inclusivity, and resilience within child protection systems. While the pilot training demonstrated the relevance and demand for climate-responsive social service workforce competencies, these capacities are not yet systematically embedded within pre-service or in-service training programmes. To ensure sustainability and scale, NISA has requested UNICEF's support to contextualize and integrate climate change and climate-resilient child protection competencies into the existing social service workforce curriculum and training modules, thereby institutionalizing these skills across the workforce.
If you would like to know more about this consultancy, please review the complete Terms of Reference here: Climate Consultant.pdf
Minimum requirements:
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