WWF-Tanzania Country Office (WWF-TCO) is seeking to hire a competent and highly motivated ‘Leader, Forest Landscape Restoration in Africa Initiative’ to be based at WWF TCO – Dar es Salaam Tanzania.
Position Title: Leader, Forest Landscape Restoration in Africa Initiative
Duration: 100% FTE for 2 years, with the possibility of extension
Reports to: Reports directly to the WWF Tanzania office line manager with a dotted line to the Forest Practice Leader. In addition, the incumbent will work closely with members of the Forest Practice Core and Leadership teams, technical and regional leads plus Focal Points in relevant countries and the Global Lead/Coordinator of the Forest Landscape Restoration (FLR) community, known within WWF as an Area of Collective Action and Innovation (ACAI).
Location: Dar es Salaam - Tanzania
Supervises: N/A
Under the guidance of Forest Practice leadership and WWF Tanzania, and in close collaboration with relevant WWF Offices, the WWF Regional Office for Africa (ROA) and the FLR ACAI, the Leader, Forest Landscape Restoration (FLR) in Africa Initiative will be responsible for the design, delivery, resourcing, monitoring and evaluation of an exciting new regional initiative for WWF.
The proposed FLR Initiative in Africa builds on political momentum from governments that have committed to restore more than 100 million ha of degraded and deforested land by 2030. A total of 27 African governments have shown exemplary political leadership by pledging to restore 111m ha, beyond the continental target of 100m ha by 2030, as of September 2018. Out of the 27 countries that have pledged, 14 are within WWF’s geographical scope in Sub-Saharan Africa. These commitments are part of the African Forest Landscape Restoration Initiative (AFR100) which contributes to the Bonn Challenge. AFR100 is a country-led effort to restore 100 million ha of degraded and deforested land in Africa by 2030. They also directly contribute to the WWF Forest Practice Outcome 3, to restore 350 million ha of forest landscapes by 2030 (which is aligned to contribute to both the Bonn Challenge and the New York Declaration on Forests).
In order to bring national commitments to reality, the proposed initiative will aim to address key barriers including: limited financing, lack of adequate social and biodiversity safeguards, limited implementation of land-use planning and governance, and insufficient regulatory incentives. In addressing these challenges, WWF will work through three main pillars: Pillar 1: Empowering national and regional governments to deliver on political commitments; Pillar 2: Developing mechanisms for enabling FLR implementation at scale; and Pillar 3: Delivering the “on the ground” implementation of government pledges/commitments.
The initiative is in the incubation stage, and its development will depend on a highly qualified Leader to lead co-design and development, working together with WWF offices in Africa and globally, and to eventually, to oversee initiative implementation. The initiative is estimated to run for five years (2020-2025).
The incumbent will:
Internal
Reports directly to the hosting WWF Tanzania Conservation Director with a dotted line to the Practice Leader (Forests). Works closely with other senior country-based staff; ROA Staff; staff implementing FLR programs in Africa, Forest Practice Core and Leadership Team members, members of other WWF Practices, technical and regional forest focal points, and the Global Lead/Coordinator of the FLR ACAI.
External
Works closely with key actors (government, private sector, national and regional forums, civil society organizations) mainly in the initiative countries, though potentially also globally, as well as donors (bilateral and multilateral).
Applications must include a cover letter and complete CV with full contact details of three referees and should be addressed to the People & Culture Manager, via email to: hresources@wwftz.org by Tuesday, 29th July 2019 at 4:30 pm. Only the shortlisted candidates will be contacted. WWF is an equal opportunity organization.