South Sudan remains one of the most fragile countries globally, with rural communities facing profound challenges related to food and nutrition insecurity, low incomes, and poor access to social and economic infrastructure and basic services. These challenges are compounded by repeated climate change shocks that have eroded the adaptive capacity of vulnerable communities. Despite its agricultural potential, systemic underinvestment, protracted conflict, and fragile governance have suppressed development. Against this backdrop, the South Sudan Livelihoods and Resilience Project (SSLRP), of the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security (MAFS), financed by the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) presents a critical opportunity to improve livelihoods and resilience of rural smallholder households across three states, eight counties. The South Sudan Livelihood Resilience Project (SSLRP) is a major initiative financed by the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the Dutch Government, and the Global Agriculture and Food Security Program (GAFSP). The project is implemented by the Government of South Sudan through the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security (MAFS), with the United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS) appointed as the Lead Implementing Agency. The overall goal of the SSLRP is to contribute to improved and resilient livelihoods among targeted rural communities in eight counties across five states (Torit, Magwi, Kajo-Keji, Wau, Jur River, Bor, Awerial, and Terekeka). The Project Development Objective is to empower communities to participate in decision-making processes that recover agricultural livelihoods, build household resilience, and promote stability. Under the project structure, UNOPS is the Lead Implementing Agency with exclusive responsibility for the full implementation of two core technical components: Component 1: Community Driven Development Planning: Focusing on building inclusive Community-Based Organizations (CBOs) and developing Community Development Plans (CDPs). Component 2: Community Agriculture Investment Fund (CAIF): Providing grants for micro-projects and constructing productive community infrastructure, including the significant rehabilitation of the Magwi Palotaka Feeder Road. In delivering these components, UNOPS is also responsible for all associated project management, monitoring, evaluation, reporting, and knowledge management functions to ensure effective execution, accountability, and learning. Component 3 (Policy, Coordination, and M&E) is implemented by the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security (MAFS), with whom UNOPS closely coordinates.
The Gender, Nutrition, and Social Inclusion Officer is responsible for the strategic integration, mainstreaming, and monitoring of gender equality, social inclusion (GESI), and nutrition-sensitive approaches across all components of the South Sudan Livelihoods and Resilience Project (SSLRP). The incumbent will ensure that project interventions are designed, implemented, and evaluated in a manner that actively promotes women’s empowerment, inclusive participation of youth, persons with disabilities, IDPs, and returnees, and improves household nutrition security. The officer will provide technical leadership, capacity building, and oversight to guarantee compliance with UNOPS and donor (IFAD) safeguarding policies, the Gender Action Learning System (GALS), and nutrition mainstreaming frameworks, thereby contributing directly to the project’s goals of enhanced resilience, food security, and inclusive community-driven development.
1. Strategic Mainstreaming and Technical Leadership
2. Capacity Building and Community Engagement
3. Monitoring, Evaluation, and Reporting
4. Safeguards Compliance and Quality Assurance