صاحب العمل نشط
حالة تأهب وظيفة
سيتم تحديثك بأحدث تنبيهات الوظائف عبر البريد الإلكترونيحالة تأهب وظيفة
سيتم تحديثك بأحدث تنبيهات الوظائف عبر البريد الإلكترونيHow can you make a difference?
UNICEF estimates that 17,000 children in Gaza are unaccompanied or separated. This is almost 1 per cent of the total population displaced by the current conflict. Each child has a heartbreaking story of devastation, loss, and grief. In the context of the intense and
widespread violence in Gaza, many children have lost or been separated from their parents who have died, been hospitalized, or been detained. In some cases, children get separated from their parents during multiple forced displacements or in the midst of frantic attempts to secure urgently needed humanitarian assistance.
UNICEF’s State of Palestine office has been working for Unaccompanied and Separated Children through targeted efforts to prevent separation in the first place, to support prompt and coordinated identification and referral to alternative care services, and in all cases possible, reunification. In many cases, unaccompanied children may need temporary care, while separated children require longer term solutions. In both cases, a family environment capable of supporting the material and emotional needs of children deprived of parental care, is in the best interests of the child.
With more than 60% of residential infrastructure destroyed, more than 100,000 dead or injured, chronic food insecurity in certain areas, and extreme deprivation across the strip, every family in Gaza is suffering. All children in Gaza are expected to need mental health and
psychosocial support, particularly those who have lost family and familiar carers. The degree of traumatic exposure, witness to terrifying events, and fear of multiple threats from attack, arrest, illness, disease, and loss of livelihood is putting an impossible strain on families.
There have been many successful parenting support interventions developed and adapted to families in Palestine. Many of them are difficult to implement at this time due to access and operational challenges. For that reason, UNICEF is proposing accessible support resources and ‘light touch’ content and engagement based on successful interventions that provide parents with the time, space, support, and information to support personal and child recovery.
Additional emphasis will be place on ensuring that families caring for Unaccompanied and Separated Children (UASC) are equipped with skills and supports to nurture the physical, mental, and emotional wellbeing of unaccompanied and/or separated children in their care
Scope Of Work
The purpose of this consultancy is to support UNICEF State of Palestine in Develop an accessible, ‘light touch’ parenting programme and include modules to specifically address the needs of families caring for UASC.
Given the current challenges in delivering traditional interventions with families, this consultancy will consider the support to families in a phased approach, with deliverables under this contract forming part of more comprehensive support to be provided as possible.
Subsequent phases will engage more routine, in person assistance to families that expands on the resources developed in this first phase.
leaflets, etc.
دوام كامل