HIAS Kenya is conducting an Endline Evaluation for the consortium project titled “Providing life-saving protection to at-risk refugees in Nairobi, Dadaab, Kakuma and Kalobeyei.” The evaluation seeks to gather feedback from beneficiaries who have received services including GBV case management, Child Protection, Legal Aid, MHPSS, and Cash Assistance. The findings will assess the impact of these interventions on the safety and dignity of refugees in Nairobi’s urban areas (Kayole, Kawangware, Eastleigh, and Kasarani).
Assessment
Objectives
The primary goal is to assess the extent to which the
project achieved its protection outcomes. Specific objectives include:
- Program Effectiveness: To evaluate
the impact of Gender and GBV programming, PSS, Legal Protection, Child
Protection, and Referrals provided to vulnerable refugees in Nairobi.
- Safety& Accountability: To determine the
percentage of beneficiaries reporting that assistance was delivered in a
safe, accessible, accountable, and participatory manner.
- Impact on Wellbeing: To measure the percentage
of individuals reporting an improved feeling of safety and dignity as a
result of the project interventions.
- Protection Knowledge: To assess the increase in
community knowledge regarding protection rights and available
feedback/complaint mechanisms.
- In light of this HIAS Kenya is seeking to
recruit 10 enumarators to participate in a comprehensive training program,
followed by a four-day data collection exercise.
Key
Responsibilities
- Training& Preparation: Attend mandatory
training for the data collection exercise to master the evaluation tool
and ethical guidelines.
- Interviewing: Conduct interviews
following guidelines and standards provided (each interview lasts
approximately 40 minutes).
- Data Capture: Accurately capture data using
digital tools such as Kobo Collect.
- Ethics: Maintain absolute anonymity
and confidentiality of respondents and uphold the Do No Harm Principle.
- Quality Assurance: Ensure data quality and
integrity during collection and reporting.
- Reporting: Submit daily progress updates to the
supervisor and report any challenges to the MEAL Team.
- Equipment: Take responsibility for any project
equipment (e.g., smartphones/tablets) provided for the exercise.
Minimum
Qualifications
- Bachelor’s degree or Diploma in Humanities and
Social Sciences
- At least 1 years’ experience in qualitative and
quantitative data collection involving human subjects.
- A similar experience with HIAS and demonstrated
knowledge of working with vulnerable refugees will be an added advantage.
- Be in the possession of a smartphone.
- Good understanding of data collection methods;
Qualitative data collection (e.g., FGDs, Key Informant Interviews) and
Quantitative data collection
- Full-time availability
- Minimum age of 18 years
- Combine teamwork and ability to work under
minimal supervision
- Good listening skills
- Resident of the data collection locations
(Eastleigh, Kawangware, Kayole, Kasarani)
- Must be conversant with national languages
(English and Swahili). Proficiency in Oromo, Somali, Kinyamulenge, French,
Arabic, and Kirundi are an added advantage.
- Experience in collecting data using
ODK/ONA/Survey CTO, KOBO TOOLBOX and other mobile phone applications will
be an added advantage.
How to
Apply
