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1. Background:
The
United Nations Human Settlements Programme,
UN-HABITAT, is the United Nations agency for human
settlements. It is mandated by the UN General Assembly
to promote socially and environmentally sustainable
communities, towns and cities with the goal of providing
adequate shelter for all. The main documents outlining
the mandate of the organization are the Vancouver
Declaration on Human Settlements, Habitat Agenda,
Istanbul Declaration on Human Settlements, the
Declaration on Cities and Other Human Settlements in
the New Millennium, and Resolution 56/206.
The agency has
four main divisions which each oversee a set of
programmes:
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The
Regional and Technical Cooperation Division
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The
Shelter and Sustainable Human Settlements
Development Division
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The
Monitoring and Research Division
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The
Financing Human Settlement Division
The Regional
Office for Asia and the Pacific (ROAP) of UN-HABITAT, in
Fukuoka, Japan, serves the Asia and Pacific region in
the implementation of the Habitat Agenda. The primary
responsibility for the implementation and follow up of
the Habitat Agenda rests with. The UN-HABITAT ROAP-Fukuoka
provides support to individual governments and their
national and local partners and monitors progress being
made in the region.
Technical
cooperation projects coordinated by the UN-HABITAT ROAP
are geographically spread from Iran in the west to the
Pacific Islands in the east, and span the entire
spectrum of urbanisation and shelter development issues.
Tasks currently being addressed range from
rehabilitation of urban settlements in Afghanistan to
strengthening housing finance institutions in Indonesia
and reducing urban violence in Papua New Guinea; from
poverty alleviation in Bangladesh to urban management in
Cambodia and Vietnam; from community water supply and
sanitation in Myanmar to city development strategies in
Sri Lanka and the Philippines; from promoting
urban-rural linkages in Nepal and Indonesia to
environmental improvement of cities in India and China.
For many
years, UN-HABITAT has provided Technical Assistance to
the Indonesian Government, on issues of housing, urban
development and land administration. In the past 10
years, it focused its support on issues of local
governance and local economic development. A central
objective in programmes such as KPEL (Partnership for
Local Economic Development, 2001-2003) and SUF/Indonesia
(Slum Upgrading Facility, on-going), is the provision of
micro-credit for home improvements, community-level
amenity upgrading and small-scale livelihoods
initiatives. Water and sanitation has often been a key
ingredient of these localised initiatives and of
supporting City Development Strategies. For the
implementation, UN-HABITAT and its partners have worked
with many local government authorities, local
micro-finance institutions and community groups.
Presently,
UN-HABITAT is actively supporting the set-up of a
network of municipal Housing Resource Centres, for the
advocacy of community-based neighbourhood and housing
development. UN-HABITAT is also completing the
implementation of a large housing programme as part of
the post-disaster reconstruction in Aceh and Nias, after
the 2004 Tsunami. It again applied a process engaging
beneficiary communities in the management of their own
reconstruction work. In addition, it has been providing
technical assistance not only to the governmental
reconstruction agency (BRR) but also to local
authorities and sub-district administrations. In the
near future, UN-HABITAT will be assisting the Government
to set up a national Habitat Secretariat, which will
provide policy analysis, best practice communication and
advocacy for pro-poor, participatory and environmentally
sustainable urban development. The Habitat Secretariat
will also promote knowledge exchange between Indonesia
and other Asian countries, in particular ASEAN.
2. Scope of
Work
The English
Editor will assist in document editing (English
language), as part of the closure of the programme.
3.
Tasks
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To provide
English language edits to the final documents of the
Policy Unit, including the White Paper and the
auxiliary documents.
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To provide
English language edits to the subtitling to up to
five training films.
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To provide
language edits to final/closure documents of ANSSP
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To assist
in the editing of documents related to activities
aimed at the transfer of know-how to Indonesia,
including:
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UN-HABITAT Indonesia’s input in the contingency plan
of the Emergency Shelter Cluster, and to provide
support by liaising with the
cluster and the cluster head (IFRC) as directed by
the Housing Policy Adviser |
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The
preparation of inputs to WUF 2008 (World Urban
Forum, Nanjing, November 2008) |
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The
preparation of relevant inputs in the ASEAN
networking of UN-HABITAT Indonesia, specifically
in relation to the ASEAN Environment and
Disaster Management Unit. |
4. Duties and Responsibilities – General
The duties and
responsibilities of the English Editor will include the
following:
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1. |
To report
to the Housing Policy Manager. |
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2. |
To
regularly liaise with the Indonesia Habitat
Programme Manager, to keep him informed on
activities in general, especially in relation to
outreach to and contacts with external
organisations. |
5.
Travel Requirements.
The Consultant
is free to choose where to perform his tasks, as long as
the output is delivered. The lumpsum payment includes
travel expenses Kuala Lumpur – Jakarta – Kuala Lumpur.
6. Required Qualification and Work Experiences
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Preferably native
english speaker
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Academic
degree (planning, social sciences, political
sciences or environmental management)
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Pre-knowledge on UN-HABITAT and ANSSP (www.unhabitat-indonesia.org)
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Excellent
command of written English
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Knowledge
of another official UN language is an asset
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Capable to
independently ensure professional text editing of
documents, especially studies and policy documents
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Basic
computer skills
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Strong
interpersonal skill that imparts confidence in peers
and builds mutual respect with both national and
international colleagues
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Ability to
manage stress under intense work condition
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Willingness and ability to work with diverse local,
national and multilateral institutions and with
community groups
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Sound
medical health, as the job requires frequent and
extended travel inside the country, and often at
short notice and without having the full benefit of
well functioning transportation facilities and
services
7.
Deliverables and Payment Terms:
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Deliverable |
Expected format/quantity |
Target Date |
Payment - % or proportion |
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Report of produced work |
CDrom |
End of contract |
100% |
Duly
authorized travel between Jakarta and Banda Aceh will be
considered official missions and paid by the programme,
but no DSA claims will result from these.
8. Other Information:
Candidates
must send his/her CV Roster to the
address below :
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