Assistant Technical Nutritionist – FAO jobs in the Philippines
- Location: Philippines
- Vacancy No: N/A
- Salary: N/A
- Organization: FAO
- Gender: Both
- Deadline: 2024-03-26
For more than four decades, FAO has been working with the Government of the Philippines, civil society, community-based organizations and the private sector to address challenges in the agriculture, fisheries and forestry sector. Joint efforts have included increasing sustainability in agricultural production, promoting value-adding practices, improving post-harvest management, enhancing productivity and increasing the resilience of agriculture-based livelihoods to natural disasters, climatic hazards and armed conflict.
Wild foods contribute to diet diversity and quality (IPBES 2022, Vogliano 2021, Burlingame 2019, Ickowitz 2014), supporting nutrition and income for an estimated half of the world’s population and 70 percent of the world’s poor (IPBES 2022). Gathering wild edible plants and hunting animals takes place in both high as well as low-and middle-income countries, often irrespective of economic status of households (IPBES 2022). Although not confined to rural areas, people have been found to forage and farm hundreds of wild species in rural areas, many gathered from the forest, averaging 100 useful species per location, and between 300-800 aggregately per country (Bharucha & Pretty, 2010), reaching as high as 1 403 species across India (Ray et al. 2020). Wild species are typically multipurpose, and often have nutritional content superior to their domesticated counterparts (Burlingame 2019), in addition to health benefits which extend the value of foods into the realm of medicine (Kuhnlein 1996).
Data on edible wild species use, availability and composition however is incomplete, as is information on consumption at scale (Raneri et al. 2023, Muir et al. 2020, Sorrenti 2017). “Underassessed” foods such as wild foods are often hidden, missing, inaccurately or insufficiently reported or missing from standard statistics, making recommendations about what to eat and grow arguably biased (Halpern et al. 2020). In turn, programmes and policies related to diets, biodiversity and sustainable land use tend to overlook potential benefits of consuming wild foods for reaching recommended nutrition intakes, and the potential benefits of gathering as a mode of food acquisition.
Existing studies assessing wild food consumption moreover have utilized more than one dietary intake method (usually 24-hr recall and food frequency questionnaire, and repeat recalls on non-consecutive days), require specific nutritional expertise and are financially and time prohibitive (Raneri et al. 2023). While no single method can assess dietary patterns or exposure perfectly and acknowledging the inherent trade-offs between specificity and comprehensiveness of data (FAO & World Bank, 2018), the dietary diversity questionnaire (DDQ) is the preferred tool to better capture consumption of wild foods in large-scale settings. The DDQ is a quick, low burden tool assessing micronutrient adequacy and dietary diversity, and it has a comparative advantage since it is widely rolled out in hundreds of countries, is scalable and can be incorporated into other sectoral surveys.
Through FAO’s Technical Cooperation Program (TCP), the Philippines is one of the five recipient countries (Cameroon, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, Philippines, and Vietnam) to implement an inter-regional TCP on “Strengthening Country Capacities to enable Forest-Based Contributions to Healthy and Sustainable Agri-food Systems” . The TCP aims to strengthen institutional capacities to support and upscale interventions to enhance forest-sector contributions to healthy and sustainable agrifood systems.
Specifically, the TCP aims to build capacity on data and knowledge on NWFPs and associated food systems to facilitate the generation of scientifically sound evidence for policy and finance decision makers; promote an enabling environment by enhancing multi-sectoral dialogue and associated interventions and policies, ensuring women, indigenous peoples and local communities’ representation; and catalyze funding from multilateral and bilateral donors to support and upscale interventions identified during
the activities of the proposed TCP project.
Reporting Lines
The Assistant Technical Nutritionist will work under the overall supervision of the FAO Representative in the Philippines, the direct supervision of the Assistant FAO for Programme, and day-to-day guidance of the National Food Security and Nutrition Specialist. He/She will work closely with the National Food Security and Nutrition Specialist of FAO Philippines and Forestry specialist (non-wood forest products, food security & nutrition) of the FAO Headquarters for the conduct of rapid assessments on potential forest foods and related systems contributing to improved food security, nutrition and biodiversity.
Technical Focus
The Assistant Technical Nutritionist will support in the conduct of rapid assessments of key forest foods for Philippines. He/She will also serve as an alternate focal point for the FSN Specialist. The Assistant Technical Nutritionist will support in coordinating with relevant stakeholders specifically with the main government partner of FAO and the identified members of the Technical Working Group (TWG).
Tasks and responsibilities
The Assistant Technical Nutritionist shall perform the following responsibilities:
- Provide support to the National Food Security and Nutrition Specialist in the preparation for meetings, workshops and trainings;
• Provide review and recommendations for the improvement of the proposed methodology and rapid assessment template;
• Support and facilitate the conduct of focus group discussions, consultations and meetings in target areas for rapid assessment;
• Provide support in the documentation, data gathering and analysis of information during assessments, consultations and meetings;
• Provide support to the Food Security and Nutrition Specialist in the conduct of meetings related to the project, as necessary, and provide feedback for actions or ways forward;
• Carry out any other relevant duties within his/her technical competence as may be requested by FAO.
CANDIDATES WILL BE ASSESSED AGAINST THE FOLLOWING
Minimum Requirements
- University degree in the field of Nutrition, Public Health or other related fields;
• At least five (5) years of relevant experience in nutrition research, assessments or surveys;
• Working knowledge (level C) of English;
• National of the Philippines or resident of the country with valid work permit.
FAO Core Competencies
- Results Focus
• Teamwork
• Communication
• Building Effective Relationships
• Knowledge Sharing and Continuous Improvement
Technical/Functional Skills
- Professional experience in implementing nutrition programs
• Strong background in coordination, planning and implementation of nutrition projects
• Good experience in participative training and research methodologies, food security and nutrition issues.
• Demonstrated capability of providing technical assistance and recommendations related to food security and nutrition at the local level.
• Knowledge and skills on MS Office applications;
Please note that all candidates should adhere to FAO Values of Commitment to FAO, Respect for All and Integrity and Transparency
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
- FAO does not charge a fee at any stage of the recruitment process (application, interview meeting, processing).
- Incomplete applications will not be considered. If you need help or have queries, please contact: Careers@fao.org
- Applications received after the closing date will not be accepted.
- Only language proficiency certificates from UN accredited external providers and/or FAO language official examinations (LPE, ILE, LRT) will be accepted as proof of the level of knowledge of languages indicated in the online applications.
- For other issues, visit the FAO employment website: http://www.fao.org/employment/home/en/
- Appointment will be subject to certification that the candidate is medically fit for appointment, accreditation, any residency or visa requirements, and security clearances.
HOW TO APPLY
- To apply, visit the recruitment website atJobs at FAO and complete your online profile. We strongly recommend that your profile is accurate, complete and includes your employment records, academic qualifications, and language skills
• Candidates are requested to attach a letter of motivation to the online profile
• Once your profile is completed, please apply, and submit your application
• Candidates may be requested to provide performance assessments and authorization to conduct verification checks of past and present work, character, education, military and police records to ascertain any and all information which may be pertinent to the employment qualifications
• Incomplete applications will not be considered
• Personal information provided on your application may be shared within FAO and with other companies acting on FAO’s behalf to provide employment support services such as pre-screening of applications, assessment tests, background checks and other related services. You will be asked to provide your consent before submitting your application. You may withdraw consent at any time, by withdrawing your application, in such case FAO will no longer be able to consider your application
• Only applications received through the FAO recruitment portal will be considered
• Your application will be screened based on the information provided in your online profile
• We encourage applicants to submit the application well before the deadline date.
If you need help or have queries, please create a one-time registration with FAO’s client support team for further assistance: https://fao.service-now.com/csp
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