Under the overall supervision of the Chief of Mission of IOM Micronesia, and the direct supervision of the Head of Sub Office in Chuuk, Federated States of Micronesia (FSM) and in close coordination with the Programme Officer (Disaster Risk Reduction) in Pohnpei, FSM, the successful candidate will support programme activities that includes but not limited to tracking of prepositioning emergency relief supplies, coordinating with DCO and local authorities, creating program support tools and templates, raising purchase requests and assisting in emergency relief activities. S/he will provide technical expertise on emergency response distribution plans coordinating NFI distributions while assisting with the implementation of IOM’s displacement tracking matrix (DTM) and protection monitoring activities implemented within the relief phase of the Typhoon Sinlaku response.
Assist in the implementation and monitoring of relief activities under the Resilience and CERF projects including supporting the physical implementation of initiatives in select municipalities across Chuuk State
EDUCATION
Bachelor’s degree in Political or Social Sciences, International Relations, Development Studies, Migration Studies, Human Rights, Law or related fields from an accredited academic institution with three years of relevant professional experience.
EXPERIENCE
Experience in liaising with governmental authorities, national/international institutions, United Nations agencies and non-governmental organizations;
Experience in working with relief programs through government, international organization, NGO or civil society
Experience in communication, coordination, facilitation of meetings, and community outreach for emergency activities is an advantage

Established in 1951, the International Organization for Migration is the leading intergovernmental organization in the field of migration and is committed to the principle that humane and orderly migration benefits migrants and society.
IOM works with its partners in the international community to assist in meeting the growing operational challenges of migration, advance understanding of migration issues, encourage social and economic development through migration and uphold the well-being and human rights of migrants.
More people are on the move today than at any other time in recorded history: 1 billion people – comprising a seventh of humanity. A variety of elements – not least the information and communications revolutions – contribute to the movement of people on such a large scale. The forces driving migration as a priority issue are: climate change, natural and manmade catastrophes, conflict, the demographic trends of an ageing industrialized population, an exponentially expanding jobless youth population in the developing world and widening North–South social and economic disparities.