ORGANIZATIONAL BACKGROUND
The International Rescue Committee (IRC) responds to the world’s worst humanitarian crises and helps people to survive and rebuild their lives. Founded in 1933 at the request of Albert Einstein, the IRC offers lifesaving care and life-changing assistance to refugees forced to flee from war or disaster. At work today in over 40 countries and 22 U.S. cities, we restore safety, dignity and hope to millions who are uprooted and struggling to endure. The IRC leads the way from harm to home.
The IRC is continuing to scale up programming in the West Bank and Gaza working closely with partners and implementing directly in health and nutrition, protection, WASH, early childhood development, food security, and cash programming to meet the most critical humanitarian needs.
Humanitarian Context
Children constitute nearly half the population of the State of Palestine and face acute, overlapping child protection risks, including family separation, exploitation, child labour, child marriage, and all forms of abuse and neglect. The conflict that escalated on 7 October 2023 has caused catastrophic humanitarian consequences: nearly all of the 2.4 million children living across the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip are affected in some way (UNICEF, March 2025). In the Gaza Strip, more than 20,632 children have reportedly been killed as of November 2025, and 44,000 children have been injured, including more than 11,000 with life-changing injuries; more than 1.9 million people — 90 per cent of the population — have been displaced, often multiple times (UNICEF, Humanitarian Action for Children — State of Palestine 2026 Appeal, December 2025). Over one million children in the Gaza Strip require psychosocial support, and more than 150,000 children in the West Bank face barriers to accessing education (UNICEF, 2026 Appeal). In the West Bank, some 33,000 Palestinians, including 14,000 children, remain displaced due to ongoing military operations (UNICEF, Humanitarian Situation Report No. 43, September 2025). At least 3.3 million people across the State of Palestine require humanitarian assistance (UNICEF, 2026 Appeal). Child protection services are severely overstretched, grave violations against children are at extreme and ever-increasing levels, and the capacity of national systems to respond has been critically degraded.
CP AoR Coordination Environment
The Child Protection Area of Responsibility (CP AoR) in the State of Palestine, established in 2008 and led by UNICEF, coordinates the inter-agency child protection response across both Gaza and the West Bank. A key CP AoR priority has been the strengthening of inter-agency child protection case management systems. The CP AoR established the Child Protection Case Management Task Force (CPCM TF) to standardise and coordinate case management approaches in line with the Child Protection Minimum Standards in Humanitarian Action (2019) and the Inter-Agency Guidelines for Case Management and Child Protection (2014). Significant progress has been achieved under dedicated technical leadership since May 2024, including reactivation of the Task Force, development of data protection protocols, revision of case management tools, and initiation of CP IMS+ (Primero) roll-out across partner organizations.
Rationale for Establishing the Position
As the existing consultancy arrangement concludes, continued technical leadership is essential to sustain CPCM TF results and complete key deliverables, including the CP IMS+ roll-out, finalisation of inter-agency SOPs, Gaza response coordination, and West Bank system strengthening. IRC, as an active CP AoR member with an established operational presence across the oPt, is positioned to host this role and deploy the incumbent fully to the CP AoR. This arrangement ensures inter-agency technical continuity under a stable hosting structure.
Scope of Work:
The Senior Child Protection Case Management Specialist provides expert technical leadership for inter-agency child protection case management across the State of Palestine, hosted by IRC and fully deployed to the Child Protection Area of Responsibility (CP AoR). The Specialist leads the CP AoR Case Management Task Force (CMTF), drives the update and roll-out of inter-agency Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs), and advances CP IMS+ (Primero) implementation across partner organizations. Following the successful development of SOPs, the CPCM specialist will work with the CP AoR and support the capacity building of Child protection actors. The position ensures coherent, sustainable inter-agency approaches to child protection case management across Gaza and the West Bank.
Position Overview:
The Specialist 's scope of work spans four interconnected areas:
Success in this position requires an individual with exemplary, demonstrated leadership abilities and strong communication and interpersonal skills, effectively applied both internally and externally. The successful candidate will possess sharp contextual analysis skills and the ability to build strategic partnerships and diversify program resources. S/he will be directly responsible for the overall coordination and strategic direction of the country program, providing oversight and coaching to Senior Management Team, leading country teams in the design and delivery of responsive, high-quality programs, and ensuring the effective management of public and private funding for results, compliance, and timely, focused reporting. The role also entails oversight of financial management and compliance systems.
Main Responsibilities:
Providing technical support to case management field practitioners (in coordination with the Child Protection AoR, Global Case Management Woking Group) to:
Support the roll-out and development of the CPIMS+/Primero in coordination with CP AoR
Review and adapt existing tools and guidance for case management in the humanitarian response in Palestine
Advocacy
Coordination and Reporting
Required Qualifications and Experience
Education: Master’s degree in social work, Psychology, International Development, or a related field is strongly required
Professional Experience: Minimum 7 years of progressively responsible experience in child protection case management in humanitarian or conflict-affected settings
Inter-Agency Coordination: Demonstrated experience leading or co-facilitating inter-agency coordination mechanisms, working groups, or task forces in humanitarian contexts
Technical Expertise: Strong technical knowledge of CP case management, SOP development, UASC response, GBV linkages, referral pathway design, and child protection information management
CP IMS+ / Primero: Familiarity with CP IMS+ (Primero); experience in system roll-out, configuration, or training delivery is a significant asset
Capacity Building: Proven experience designing and delivering training, mentoring, and coaching for national and international staff and government counterparts
Government Engagement: Demonstrated ability to engage constructively with government counterparts, particularly line ministries with responsibility for social welfare and child protection
Contextual Knowledge: Knowledge of the oPt humanitarian context and/or direct experience working in similar humanitarian emergencies strongly preferred
Languages: Excellent English (written and spoken) required; Arabic highly desirable
Other Skills: Strong communication, facilitation, and analytical reporting skills; demonstrated ability to manage competing priorities across complex multi-stakeholder environments.
Compensation: (UK Pay Range: 36,818-43,316 GBP/yr) Posted pay ranges apply to US-based candidates. Ranges are based on various factors including the labor market, job type, internal equity, and budget. Exact offers are calibrated by work location, individual candidate experience and skills relative to the defined job requirements.
Equal Opportunity Employer: IRC is an Equal Opportunity Employer. IRC considers all applicants on the basis of merit without regard to race, sex, color, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, age, marital status, veteran status, disability or any other characteristic protected by applicable law.
Professional Standards: All International Rescue Committee workers must adhere to the core values and principles outlined in IRC Way - Standards for Professional Conduct. Our Standards are Integrity, Service, Equality and Accountability. In accordance with these values, the IRC operates and enforces policies on Safeguarding, Conflicts of Interest, Fiscal Integrity, and Reporting Wrongdoing and Protection from Retaliation. IRC is committed to take all necessary preventive measures and create an environment where people feel safe, and to take all necessary actions and corrective measures when harm occurs. IRC builds teams of professionals who promote critical reflection, power sharing, debate, and objectivity to deliver the best possible services to our clients.