Monitoring & Evaluation Associate- TAL, CBRP, Hariyo Ban Program
WWF Nepal

Position: Monitoring & Evaluation Associate- TAL, CBRP, Hariyo Ban Program (Hot Job)

  • No. of Openings 1
  • Category NGO/INGO/Social/Develop.Projects
  • Job Location 26
  • Job Level Junior Level
  • Salary As per organization's rules and regulations.
  • Education Level A Bachelors degree in Environment Management, Development or a related field.
  • Experience At least 2 years of working experience in monitoring and database management. Knowledge and use of statistical tools is required.
  • Expiry date Aug 27, 2017 (Expired)
Job Description
  • The Monitoring and Evaluation Associate, Terai Arc Landscape Corridors and Bottleneck Restoration Project (TAL CBRP) for Hariyo Ban Program will assist in implementation of monitoring framework and activities of Hariyo Ban Program under the direct supervision of the M&E Specialist.
  • S/he will be primarily responsible for maintaining and updating the database system in close coordination with the program units and field office.
  • S/he will assist the field offices in updating the datasheets and will make amendments in the data variables and the template as required.
Apply Instruction

Interested applicants are requested to download the application form and send the same with an application letter to the email address [email protected]

Please mention the position you are applying for as the subject. Emails without an application letter and completed application form will not be entertained. Only shortlisted candidates will be informed. Detailed TOR for the mentioned position can be downloaded. Website: http://www.wwfnepal.org

 

This job has been expired on 2017-08-27
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About Company
WWF is the world’s leading independent conservation organization originated from Switzerland in 1961 and currently running in more than 100 countries ...

WWF is the world’s leading independent conservation organization originated from Switzerland in 1961 and currently running in more than 100 countries across 6 continents. The program started from conservation of wildlife to broader concept of building future where humans can live in harmony with nature. WWF has created 1,480 ecoregions that categorize the world into its natural ecosystems. Nepal with Bhutan, northeast India, southeast Tibet and northern Myanmar, falls under the Eastern Himalaya region housing the threatened species Snow Leopards, Bengal Tigers and One-horned Rhinos.

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