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Office/Unit/Project Description
The Republic of Suriname lies on the North-Eastern Atlantic coast of South America, bordering with Guyana to the West, French Guyana to the East, and Brazil to the South. It has an area of 163,820 km2 and a population of just under 600,000. With more than 15.2 million ha of forest cover (93% of its total area) based on data from 2019 (Forestry sector report 2019).Suriname is one of the most forested countries in the world. Historical annual rates of deforestation below 0.1% have allowed the country to be classified as a High Forest cover, Low Deforestation rate (HFLD) country. Forests landscapes provide a multitude of environmental and social benefits, including income and food security for local communities, national income from logging and mining, and global environmental benefits such as climate mitigation and biodiversity preservation. Suriname ́s forests act as a carbon sink, making it a carbon negative country (net carbon capture per capita of 3.3 tons). In addition, Surinamese forests provide a variety of ecological goods, including, for example: timber, game, plant material for making household items, firewood, oil from palm fruits, medicinal plants, liana and leaves as thatching material, and sand and gravel for construction purposes, as well as maintaining key ecological services, such as water protection, soil quality and climate regulation.
Suriname’s forests are part of the Amazon biome. At the regional level, Suriname is located within two of WWF's Global 200 eco-regions, which are considered significant for the conservation of global biodiversity and where continuous forest remains intact (Guyana moist forests and Guyana Highlands moist forests). Surinamese forests host significant levels of biodiversity, which can be attributed not only to this significant forest cover, but also to the large variety of habitats, temperatures, and relatively low population pressures to date. The National Herbarium of Suriname, in collaboration with the National Zoological Collection of Suriname, has identified 715 bird species, 187 moss species, 343 fern species, 318 freshwater fish species, 192 mammal species, 175 reptile species, 102 amphibian species, and 5,100 plant species in Suriname. Approximately 35 to 40% of the plant species and 20% of the animal species are endemic to the Guiana Shield. The IUCN Red List has recorded 83 vulnerable and endangered species in Suriname. To protect this rich biodiversity, important carbon stocks and the many ecosystem services provided by forests, Suriname has already dedicated 13.5% of its total land area to a national protection system to preserve forests and wetlands and is committed to maintaining its HFLD status by expanding protected areas and increasing efforts towards sustainable forest and ecosystem management.
Project context
The project aims to reduce the threats to biodiversity in the Suriname Amazon by securing equitable management of its protected and productive landscapes. Being fully complementary to the ongoing GEF project to improve the environmental management of ASGM, this project targets threats related to ill-planned and illegal forestry and infrastructure, recognizing these as interacting with ASGM. It will do so through integrated approaches that deliver mutually supportive conservation and sustainable livelihood benefits. The project strategy addresses the national scale by strengthening institutional capacities for integrated landscape management and conservation and promoting enabling policies for SFM and nature tourism, among others. Field based project interventions will take place in two target productive landscapes: 1) Saamaka/Matawai landscape; and 2) the Coeroeni/Paroe landscape. The four protected areas targeted by the project include: the Central Suriname Nature Reserve (CSNR), the Sipaliwini Nature Reserve (SNR), Brownsberg Nature Park (BNP), and the Brinckheuvel Nature Reserve (BNR) (see Annex 1 for maps and more detailed descriptions of these areas). The implementing partner (GBB and the responsible partners (LBB, SBB) will contribute to the project objectives with their own funds (co-financing) through the articulation of their strategies and policies for protected areas, forest management and sustainable livelihoods with the activities and outcomes of the project, in collaboration with other public and private agencies. The latter actors will directly contribute to the project with their own funds for activities that contribute to the project objectives in the targeted landscapes and at the national level (CI, ACT, WWF, Tropenbos, SFM Group).
The project will be implemented over a period of 60 months and will be coordinated through a project management team located at the Ministry of Land Policy and Forest Management in Suriname.
Scope
The Project Manager (PM) has the responsibility to ensure the effective and efficient day-to-day implementation of the project with assistance from the project assistant Technical and Administrative Monitoring, who supports the implementation and monitoring of project activities. The Project Manager should facilitate the development of the planned activities and work in close collaboration with the ASL Technical experts, the Sub Directorate Forest Management, the Suriname Forest Service (LBB) cq. Nature Conservation Division (NCD), Foundation for Forest Management and Production Control (SBB) and other project partners.
Summary and detailed list of key functions
The Project Manager (PM), is responsible for the day-to-day management of the project, including the mobilization of all project inputs, supervision of the Project Management Unit staff, consultants and sub-contractors and coordination with the implementing party, responsible parties (SBB and LBB) and UNDP. He/she is also responsible for the generation of outputs in direct control of GBB. His/her tasks include.
Duties and Responsibilities:
Ensure project management and implementation
2. Ensure partnership building and other activities
Facilitate knowledge management, monitoring and evaluation
Ensure all project documentation (progress reports, consulting and other technical reports, minutes of meetings, etc.) are properly included in KM system.
The incumbent performs other duties within their functional profile as deemed necessary for the efficient functioning of the Office and the Organization.
Institutional Arrangement
The Project Manager (has a Technical and Administrative Monitoring project Assistant and) s/he reports to the Deputy Permanent Secretary Forest Management. On a day-to-day basis, S/he will work in close coordination with colleagues of the PMU, the Ministry of GBB, NCD, SBB and the UNDP Suriname Office, local and international consultants, other responsible partners, Key Ministries of the project.
Competencies
Core
Achieve results | LEVEL 2: Scale up solutions and simplifies processes, balances speed and accuracy in doing work |
Think innovatively | LEVEL 2: Offer new ideas/open to new approaches, demonstrate systemic/integrated thinking |
Learn continuously | LEVEL 2: Go outside comfort zone, learn from others and support their learning |
Adapt with agility | LEVEL 2: Adapt processes/approaches to new situations, involve others in change process |
Act with determination | LEVEL 2: Able to persevere and deal with multiple sources of pressure simultaneously |
Engage and partner | LEVEL 2: Is facilitator/integrator, bring people together, build/maintain coalitions/partnerships |
Enable diversity and inclusion | LEVEL 2: Facilitate conversations to bridge differences, considers in decision making |
People Management
UNDP People Management Competencies can be found in the dedicated site.
Cross-functional & Technical competencies
Thematic area | Competencies | definition |
Business Direction and Strategy | Strategic Thinking | Develop effective strategies and prioritized plans in line with UNDP’s mission and objectives, based on the systemic analysis of challenges, opportunities and potential risks; link the general vision to reality on the ground to create tangible targeted solutions; learn from a variety of sources to anticipate and effectively respond to both current and future trends; demonstrate foresight. |
Business Direction and Strategy | Effective decision making | Take decisions in a timely and efficient manner in line with one's authority, area of expertise and resources and take into consideration potential wider implications. |
Business Management | Partnership management | Build and maintain partnerships with wide networks of stakeholders, Governments, civil society and private sector partners, experts and others in line with UNDP strategy and policies |
Business Management | Project management | Ability to plan, organize, prioritize and control resources, procedures and protocols to achieve specific goals |
Business Management | Risk Management | Identify and organize action around reducing, mitigating and proactively managing risks |
Business Management |
Customer Satisfaction/Client Management
|
Ability to respond timely and appropriately with a sense of urgency, provide consistent solutions, and deliver timely and quality results and/or solutions to fulfil and understand the real customers' needs. Provide inputs to the development of customer service strategy. Look for ways to add value beyond clients' immediate requests. Ability to anticipate client's upcoming needs and concerns. |
Partnership Management |
Strategic engagement
|
Ability to capture and sustain attention, interest and agreement of high-level, influential policy and decision makers and secure their buy-in of high-level vision and objectives |
Minimum Qualifications of the Successful NPSA
Min. Academic Education
Advanced university degree (Master’s degree or equivalent) in Social Sciences, International Development, Sustainable Development; Natural Resource/Environmental Management, Management, Economics, or a Climate Change related field is required.Or
A Bachelor’s Degree with 2 additional years of qualifying experience will be given due consideration in lieu of Master’s Degree.
Min. years of relevant Work experience
A minimum of 2 years (with master’s degree) or 4 years (with bachelor’s degree) of relevant project management experience, with at least one year experience in managing natural resource management related projects
Desired additional skills and competencies
Required Language(s) (at working level)
Equal opportunity
As an equal opportunity employer, UNDP values diversity as an expression of the multiplicity of nations and cultures where we operate and, as such, we encourage qualified applicants from all backgrounds to apply for roles in the organization. Our employment decisions are based on merit and suitability for the role, without discrimination.
UNDP is also committed to creating an inclusive workplace where all personnel are empowered to contribute to our mission, are valued, can thrive, and benefit from career opportunities that are open to all.
Sexual harassment, exploitation, and abuse of authority
UNDP does not tolerate harassment, sexual harassment, exploitation, discrimination and abuse of authority. All selected candidates, therefore, undergo relevant checks and are expected to adhere to the respective standards and principles.
Right to select multiple candidates
UNDP reserves the right to select one or more candidates from this vacancy announcement. We may also retain applications and consider candidates applying to this post for other similar positions with UNDP at the same grade level and with similar job description, experience and educational requirements.
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