The World Food Programme (WFP) in Mozambique made the transition to the Country Strategic Plan (CSP) in 2017. Through the CSP, WFP Mozambique established a long-term commitment to build resilience against climate shocks for greater food security and nutrition. The initiative brings together the different programming approaches implemented by the CO, including Food Assistance for Assets, the R4 Rural Resilience Initiative (Conservation agriculture, Village savings and loans, Micro-insurance, Watershed management, Climate services), and Shock Sensitive Social Protection, aiming to establish linkages to the other Activities under the CSP, such as emergency, nutrition, Smallholder Agricultural Market Support, Capacity Strengthening, and School Feeding, as most fitting.
Malnutrition remains a serious threat to lasting human and economic development in Mozambique. Despite a significant increase in political will, capacity strengthening in food security and nutrition (FSN) overall and targeted investments for improved nutrition over the last 10 years, it is still estimated that almost 11 % of GDP is lost annually due to malnutrition (Cost of Hunger Study, 2017). Adding to this, Mozambique is increasingly suffering under the triple burden of malnutrition with overweight, underweight and micronutrient deficiencies co-existing in urban settings, while the former two prevail in rural settings.
The Intern will support all programs, complementing the activities and measure the effect of our programs in nutritional terms on our target group, focusing on monitor and report for WFP Nutrition specific and sensitive programs and interventions, provide technical assistance to the design of policies and programs that directly impact nutrition in their respective for the programs, provide effective specialized support and technical analyses to policy and programme activities that effectively meet the nutritional needs as part of WFP nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive programming.
This work is to be conducted with WFP internal units, at Country Office and Field Office levels, as well as external partners, including government counterparts, UN agencies, NGO partners, and the relevant private sector organizations.