Mission and objectives
UNDP supports strategic capacity development initiatives to promote inclusive growth and sustainable human development. Together with national, regional and local authorities, civil societies, private sector, UNDP strives to support Ukraine in its efforts to eliminate poverty, develop people’s capacity, achieve equitable results, sustain the environment, and advance democratic governance. UNDP is in line with 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), to achieve national strategic capacity development.Context
After more than three years of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine by the Russian Federation (RF), the War is entering a new phase, marked by intensified mass attacks with drones and missiles on people and civilian infrastructure in Ukraine. Such massive and indiscriminate strikes on residential houses, health facilities, schools, and the energy sector across Ukraine inflict increasingly severe hardships on civilians, making Ukraine even more dependent on external support and undermining ongoing and future recovery efforts. The country is now facing an entirely new set of challenges requiring urgent and adaptive recovery measures. Building on Japan’s extensive expertise and the strong Japan-UNDP partnership in advancing recovery and the HDP nexus in complex crisis contexts such as Ukraine, the provision of urgent, integrated, and multi-sectoral support is critical to address the cumulative damage from the protracted war and the imminent challenges resulting from intensified mass attacks on civilians in 2025. This project aims to catalyse urgent recovery and strengthen resilience in response to the surge in deaths, destruction, displacement by recent intensified mass attacks and cumulative suffering caused by the war in Ukraine. It seeks to promote Human Security by implementing immediate and coordinated responses to the interconnected and multidimensional threats that the country is currently facing, while strategically leveraging Japan’s experience, technologies, and expertise to address challenges in recovery in Ukraine. The complex and compounded crises in Ukraine call for a holistic, multi-sectoral approach that transcends sectoral boundaries and prioritizes the needs of the most affected populations, requiring tailored and integrated forms of support with three strategic focuses on: i) Essential Basic Services and a Safe Living Environment; ii) Socio-Economic Resilience; and iii) Transparent and Accountable Recovery Process. The project intends to demonstrate a proof of concept for the 'Co-Creation' cooperation approach by strategically leveraging Japan’s knowledge, technologies, and expertise to address urgent recovery needs in Ukraine and creating an enabling environment where the private sector, either domestic or international, including Japanese, can engage and take part in bringing and accelerating Ukraine’s build-back-better recovery, particularly through public-private partnerships (PPPs) recovery. A significant challenge facing Ukraine is the limited access of young people, particularly young persons with disabilities, to education, skills development, employment opportunities, entrepreneurship support, and economic participation. To address these challenges, UNDP is supporting the development of a Model on Economic Self-Reliance of Youth, including Youth with Disabilities, aimed at creating an integrated pathway from education and skills development to employment, entrepreneurship, and sustainable economic participation. The Model should be based on strengthening inclusion, improving economic opportunities, and facilitating coordinated policy responses across relevant sectors and institutions. The development and institutionalization of such a model requires a coherent legal and regulatory framework that is consistent with Ukrainian legislation, international legal standards, principles of inclusion of people with disabilities, youth policy priorities and relevant commitments to European integration.Task Description
Competencies and values
• Accountability • Professionalism • Strategic thinking • Analytical thinking • Judgement and decision-making • Partnership building • Knowledge sharing • Self-managementLiving conditions and remarks
As it is a national UN Volunteer's assignment, the UN volunteer shall organize his/her accommodation by themselves. The contract lasts for the period indicated in the vacancy with the possibility of extensions subject to availability of funding, operational necessity, and satisfactory performance. However, there is no expectation of renewal of the assignment. This is a part-time contract (50% of engagement). Allowances: • Volunteer Living Allowance (VLA): A Volunteer Living Allowance (VLA) USD 1480 (equivalent in UAH) is provided monthly to cover housing, utilities, and normal cost of living expenses. This includes Hardship Differentials for the period while the ICSC applies hardship classification to duty stations in Ukraine as “E”. Medical and life insurance: Medical insurance: The UN Volunteer will receive UNV provided medical insurance coverage for service-incurred accidents. Life Insurance: UN Volunteers are covered by life insurance for the duration of the UN Volunteer assignment for service-incurred accidents. You can check full entitlements at the duty station at https://app.unv.org/calculator. The complete UN Volunteer Conditions of Service is available at https://explore.unv.org/cos.”