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1. Purpose of consultancy
The purpose of this consultancy is to conduct a comprehensive diagnostic assessment of the JFDA entire ethical and integrity framework. By systematically mapping and evaluating all relevant policies, procedures, and practices (such as Code of Conduct, Ethical workplace policies, anticorruption and misuse of authority policies), the consultancy will determine their compliance with national laws and alignment with international best practices.
2. Background
As an ongoing effort to enhance service delivery JFDA is undertaking reforms to strengthen an ethical, safe, and accountable public health system. Current policies through a comprehensive review and assessment.
The goal is to produce a clear analysis of existing gaps, risks, and inconsistencies, culminating in a prioritized and actionable remediation plan designed to strengthen governance, enhance accountability, and bolster public trust in the health sector
Overall project objective:
Map and assess current policies and procedures of ethical workplace, code of conduct and any relevant documents available at JFDA.
3. Work to be performed
1. Mapping and Assessment: Map and assess all relevant policies, procedures, and practices in JFDA and affiliated entities for relevance, effectiveness, and coherence.
2. Evaluate Compliance and Analyse Alignment: Systematically assess the mapped policies, procedures and practices for compliance with national laws and regulations and analyze the documents for alignment with relevant international standards and best practices in public health governance.
3. Identify Gaps and Inconsistencies: To identify any functional gaps, internal inconsistencies, ambiguities, and areas of potential risk within the current mapped documents.
Scope of Work
Output 1: Mapping and Assessment
Deliverable 1.1 Conduct an inception meeting with the JFDA to confirm the precise scope, methodology, and list of documents for review.
Deliverable 1.2 Compile a policy inventory and document flow (laws, regulations, internal circulars, HR manuals, facility procedures).
Deliverable 1.3 Assess clarity, usability, enforcement pathways, and accessibility (including language).
Deliverable 1.4 Identify gaps on: conflict of interest, gifts/hospitality, secondary employment, political activity, digital conduct/social media, anti-corruption, procurement ethics, grievance and whistleblowing, safeguarding/SEAH, workplace harassment/bullying, non-discrimination, child protection (where relevant), privacy/data protection, incident reporting/case management.
Output 2: Evaluate Compliance
Deliverable 2.1 Determine the extent to which existing JFDA-mapped policies, procedures, and practices comply with national laws and regulations and civil service requirements.
Deliverable 2.2 Assess alignment with international standards and good practice in public-sector ethics and public health governance (e.g., UNCAC, WHO/UN safeguarding and PSEAH standards, IHR (2005, as amended), OECD Public Integrity Recommendation, ISO guidance on compliance/whistleblowing).
Deliverable 2.3 Produce a clause-level compliance and alignment matrix with prioritized corrective actions.
Output 3: Identify Gaps and Inconsistencies
Deliverable 3.1 Detect functional gaps, internal inconsistencies, ambiguities, and risk areas across mapped JFDA policies, procedures, and practices.
Deliverable 3.2 Produce a prioritized, actionable remediation plan (quick wins vs. structural fixes).
Deliverables Key Contents/Notes
Output 1 - Mapping & Assessment
| Deliverable | Key contents / notes | 
| Inception Note & Workplan | Scope, methodology, roles, timeline, risks, document request list | 
| Policy Inventory Register & Document Flow & Ownership Map | Master list (laws/regs/circulars/HR manuals/SOPs), owner, version/date, status, applicability, language, access path, last review, Policy lifecycle, escalation/reporting pathways | 
| Clarity/Usability & Accessibility Review | Findings by document; readability & availability checks; quick fixes, clarity, usability, enforcement, accessibility | 
| Thematic Gap Matrix (by domain) | Domains: CoI, gifts, secondary jobs, political activity, digital conduct, anti-corruption, procurement ethics, grievance/whistleblowing, SEAH, harassment, non-discrimination, child protection (if relevant), privacy/data, incident reporting/CM; fields: current clause, gap, risk, priority, owner, fix | 
Output 2 - Evaluate Compliance
| Deliverable | Key contents / notes | 
| National Compliance Checklist | Clause-level map vs. national laws, civil service code, sector regulations | 
| International Standards Crosswalk | Mapping vs. UNCAC, WHO/UN safeguarding & PSEAH, IHR (2005, as amended), OECD Public Integrity Rec., ISO 37301/37002 | 
| Consolidated Compliance & Alignment Matrix | Requirement, current JFDA clause(s), gap, risk, corrective action, owner, effort, timeframe, dependency | 
| Legal/Policy Issues Log | Items needing legal interpretation or high-level policy decision | 
| Compliance Findings Brief | Major gaps, legal exposure, quick amendments not needing legislation; 90-day action shortlist | 
Output 3 - Identify Gaps & Inconsistencies
| Deliverable | Key contents / notes | 
| Gap & Inconsistency Register | Functional gaps, contradictions, ambiguities, process weak points; source references | 
| Prioritized Remediation Plan | Produce a prioritized, actionable remediation plan (quick wins vs. structural fixes). | 
| Executive Decision Memo | Top 5 decisions/approvals needed; options & implications | 
4. Qualifications, experience, skills and languages
Educational Qualifications:
Advanced University degree in Law, Public Administration, Health Policy, or related field.
Experience:
Essential: A minimum of 7 years of relevant experience, at national level in international protection policies and programmes development.
Desirable:
Experience in developing strategic proposals.
Experience at international level in international protection policies and programmes development.
Relevant work experience in WHO, other UN agencies, and recognized humanitarian organizations.
Skills/Technical skills and knowledge:
- Report-writing skills.
- Strong interpersonal skills and professional skills in interacting with government and development partners.
- Strong legal analysis and procedural drafting skills; experience aligning with civil service frameworks.
- Facilitation skills for co-design and validation; experience with government ministries.
Languages and level required:
Expert level in English and Arabic
5. Location
Amman – Jordan (On-site).
6. Planned timelines (Subject to confirmation)
20 working days
Start date: 16 November 2025
End date: 18 December 2025
7. Medical clearance
The selected Consultant will be expected to provide a medical certificate of fitness for work.
8. Travel
The Consultant is not expected to travel, but will may need to conduct field visits within the country.
Additional Information
· This vacancy notice may be used to identify candidates for other similar consultancies at the same level.
Only candidates under serious consideration will be contacted.
A written test may be used as a form of screening.
If your candidature is retained for interview, you will be required to provide, in advance, a scanned copy of the degree(s)/diploma(s)/certificate(s) required for this position. WHO only considers higher educational qualifications obtained from an institution accredited/recognized in the World Higher Education Database (WHED), a list updated by the International Association of Universities (IAU)/United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). The list can be accessed through the link: http://www.whed.net/. Some professional certificates may not appear in the WHED and will require individual review.
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The WHO is committed to achieving gender parity and geographical diversity in its workforce. Women, persons with disabilities, and nationals of unrepresented and underrepresented Member States (https://www.who.int/careers/diversity-equity-and-inclusion) are strongly encouraged to apply for WHO jobs.
Persons with disabilities can request reasonable accommodations to enable participation in the recruitment process. Requests for reasonable accommodation should be sent through an email to reasonableaccommodation@who.int
· An impeccable record for integrity and professional ethical standards is essential. WHO prides itself on a workforce that adheres to the highest ethical and professional standards and that is committed to put the WHO Values Charter (https://www.who.int/about/who-we-are/our-values) into practice.
WHO has zero tolerance towards sexual exploitation and abuse (SEA), sexual harassment and other types of abusive conduct (i.e., discrimination, abuse of authority and harassment). All members of the WHO workforce have a role to play in promoting a safe and respectful workplace and should report to WHO any actual or suspected cases of SEA, sexual harassment and other types of abusive conduct. To ensure that individuals with a substantiated history of SEA, sexual harassment or other types of abusive conduct are not hired by the Organization, WHO will conduct a background verification of short-listed candidates.
WHO has a smoke-free environment and does not recruit smokers or users of any form of tobacco.
Consultants shall perform the work as independent contractors in a personal capacity, and not as a representative of any entity or authority.
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