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You will be updated with latest job alerts via emailMorocco occupies an important geopolitical position along the Atlantic and Western Mediterranean Routes and at the crossroads between the African and European continents and one can see this reflected in its response to increasing immigration and transit migration. Morocco has become a country of origin transit destination and return for migrants from the African continent mainly.
Due to Moroccos strategic geopolitical location it continues to be an attraction pole for the growing number of unaccompanied and separated children (UASC) on the move. Most of the children aim at arriving to Spain and Italy amongst which are Moroccan nationals (among other nationalities). Although there are no official statistics or a profiling of the UASC in Morocco (at a national level) the work done through IOMs partners in the past years highlights the vulnerabilities of these children which are further exacerbated with the lack of an efficient stateowned protection mechanism in Morocco. This leads them to be exposed to further exploitation and falling into trafficking networks. Unaccompanied and separated children (UASC) nationals and nonnationals represent a growing share of people in migratory situations on Moroccan territory. A study conducted in 2016 by Caritas and Doctors of the World Belgium allowed the identification of a typology of UASC profiles in the Kingdom of Morocco. According to the same study there are four predominant profiles: adventurous minors young wanderers which include refugees victims of violence or children in street situations footballers and children trafficked for sexual or labor exploitation.
According to IOMs preparatory studies on migration flow of unaccompanied and separated children in Morocco undertaken in previous phases it outlined that; for foreign unaccompanied migrant children in Morocco often the journey is a project shared and supported by the family or the community in the country of origin with the aim to seek better life opportunities or to flee environmental or political crisis. The root causes are usually poverty and low social mobility that make it extremely difficult for migrant children to improve their social status and economic resources therefore not allowing them to access basic services such as health and education in their countries of origin. Differently from the first profile Moroccan children migrate to escape from a violent family and social isolation context where multiple factors contribute to the marginalization and alienation of Moroccan youth including lack of access to quality education and high rates of unemployment. Independently from their migration path all unaccompanied and separated children are highly exposed to human trafficking sexual and labor exploitation throughout all their migration journey.
Funded since 2018 by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark the projects previous phases (respectively from January 2018 to September 2019 for the first phase and from September 2019 to June 2023 for the second) have allowed IOM to gather information and best practices on the assistance of children on the move; as well as undertake field studies to enrich the literature on UASC.
This is the third phase of this IOM project centering UASC titled Strengthening child protection and assistance particularly for unaccompanied and separated children (UASC) in selected regions in Morocco.
Its central objective is contributing to the reinforcement of the child protection system and access to child protection services for UASC and children at risk of trafficking exploitation and abuse in Morocco.
IOM Morocco through this intervention aims to identify UASC and deliver different levels of services (humanitarian medical legal shelter educational etc. as well as strengthen capacity at the institutional and civil society levels through trainings of professionals and the elaboration of a referral mechanism in the Oriental region where a significant proportion of UASC have been identified. Finally the project furthermore aims to sensitize UASC and youth to the risks of irregular migration and its alternatives.
The purpose of this midterm evaluation is to assess the relevance and efficiency of the project at a midpoint of implementation. The evaluations specific objectives are to:
This evaluation is intended to be for the use of the project manager and project team to design and implement more efficient intervention in the second part of this phase of the project; complying with engagement with donor standards regarding evidencebased implementation. This midterm assessment will furthermore serve to assess the relevance of the intervention and accountability towards UASC beneficiaries; as well as draw recommendations and benefit from lessons learned through the evaluation.
The midterm evaluation will cover implementation of the first half of the UASC projects third phase; from January 2024 to December 2024. Geographical areas to be covered are the zones in which the intervention is taking place; the regions of CasablancaSettat MarrakechSafi and Oriental with a focus on the cities of Casablanca Marrakech and Nador respectively according to the location of civil society partners of the project.
Among project activities to be evaluated are direct assistance to UASC both in and outside the partner CSO shelters as well as sensitization sessions conducted for UASC and trainings for institutional and civil society capacity building. The evaluation will cover the activities and the indicators they respond to as per the result matrix while also taking into consideration the crosscutting themes of gender and rightsbased approaches.
Evaluation criteria for this evaluation are as follows according to OECDDAC Evaluation standards relevance effectiveness efficiency coherence and sustainability (detailed questions relevant to each standard are included in the next section).
The below questions are indicative questions to be addressed in the evaluation under each evaluation criterion:
Evaluation Methodology
The approach for this evaluation will give a larger (but not exclusive) focus to qualitative techniques due to the nature of the project and the availability of data. Quantitative analysis could be considered.
The approach for this evaluation must abide by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and more specifically by the Convention of the Rights of the Child (CRC).All informants will be offered informed consent and the option of confidentiality for all methods used.
The evaluation team is expected to use evaluation methods such as:
The evaluator will be expected to develop a more detailed evaluation methodology to meet expectations in line with this evaluations overall purpose.
Guidelines related to interviewing UASC and limitations of the evaluation
Normally as UASC are unaccompanied minors without an available legal guardian they cannot consent to being interviewed through focus groups or any other data collection method that requires their voice or input. The only case in which this can happen is if the civil society organization shelter at which they reside is legally allowed to vouch for them as their tutor and gives consent for them to participate in such an exercise. This has notably been pointed out as one of the main difficulties encountered by previous evaluators of the project.
Considering the context of assistance of children in Morocco and the nature of the cases assisted through the project IOM Morocco nonetheless finds itself under the contextual obligation of interacting with and interviewing unaccompanied minors during case management; to assess needs and redirect them towards child protection shelters. This is a component that the evaluator will have to take into account in their methodology during this midterm evaluation.
Specification of roles
The Project Manager is responsible for managing the evaluation process and all the steps that come with it. She is responsible for making sure the project documents and necessary contact information with the stakeholders including donors and government partners are available to the evaluator. The National M&E Officer in close coordination with the Cairo regional office ROMEO is responsible for the quality check of the deliverables and their compliance with the IOM Monitoring & Evaluation policies and guidelines. The Project Manager can share deliverables of the mission with other secondary reviewers such as national partners regional thematic specialists or keys stakeholders. Processes for quality assurance include the following:
Finally the evaluator or evaluation team is responsible for conducting the evaluation: implementation of the evaluation plan collecting data analyzing said data and drafting the evaluation deliverables according to the agreedupon ToRs. All the while abiding by the relevant ethics and data protection norms and standards and guidelines according to the agreedupon ToRs.
The inception report should clearly outline the evaluation approach and tools to be used. It must also include an evaluation matrix which includes the methodology used indicators evaluation questions and detailed work plan (the template will be provided by IOM).
A maximum of 40pages long draft evaluation report in English and without annexes (including an executive summary and outlining the progress of the project indicators data sources and findings of the evaluation good practices lessons learned missed opportunities strengths and weaknesses gaps and challenges on the design management and implementation of the project theory of changes TOC . The draft report will be presented to IOM for comments and inputs after which the evaluator will finalize the report and submit the final evaluation report to IOM. (the template will be provided by IOM)
A final evaluation report that reflects comments/feedback from IOM. The final report should be structured according to IOMs evaluation report template (will be provided by IOM) and include the following key sections
A twopage evaluation brief in English and French (template to be provided by IOM)
A management response matrix partially filled out (template to be provided by IOM)
The consultants performance will be evaluated in accordance with the quality of deliverables and their compliance with the following criteria: relevance effectiveness efficiency coherence compliance with IOM data protection principles and timely delivery of consultancy products (see table below).
Activity
Responsible party
Working days
Timing
Start of consultancy and kickoff meeting
Evaluator Project Manager IOM M&E staff
Number of days the activity is estimated to take
12th of May 2025
Inception report; document review development of evaluation tools and evaluation matrix and TOC
Evaluator
15 days
26th of May 2025
IOM review and feedback on the inception report
IOM
7 days
2nd of June 2025
Primary data collection
Evaluator
20 days
22nd of June 2025
Draft evaluation report: drafting and submission to IOM feedback
Evaluator
10 days
July 2nd 2025
Final evaluation report: Submission of the final report (including management response matrix and evaluation brief)
Evaluator
15 days
16th of July 2025
IOM review and feedback
Project Manager and IOM M&E staff
7 days
23rd of July 2025
IOM abides by thenorms and standards of UNEG and expects all evaluation stakeholders to be familiar with theethical conduct guidelines of UNEG and the consultant(s) with theUNEG codes of conduct as well.
The evaluator must also followIOMs Data Protection Principles as well as IOMs ownEvaluation guidelines.
The evaluation may cover sensitive and confidential information and the evaluation team may have contact with UASC as informants and have access to data on specific cases in which case the confidentiality of the individuals and the case details must be respected and maintained. In all contacts with children the ethical guidelines regarding the issues of confidentiality informed consent and not exposing the child to danger must be respected. If consent cannot be given by the child it must be sought from a parent or a legal guardian.
The final evaluation of the tenders will be based on a weighting of the technical and financial evaluation criteria:
The final evaluation of the offer will be based on a weighting of the technical and financial evaluation criteria. The technical score (St) and the financial score (Sf) of each offer will then be combined into an overall score (Sg) per offer according to the following breakdown:
St 70 of the overall score and Sf 30 of the overall score.
The overall score awarded to the bids will be used to rank the bids by applying the following formula which will determine the best bid with regard to the selection criteria proposed for the assignment:
Sg (St x 70 (Sf x 30.
The interested candidates are expected to submit a technical and financial proposal (not exceeding 10 pages) with an allinclusive itemized budget and their CVs cover letter as well as a recent evaluation report example. The proposal must provide details of the methodology and approach to the assignment. The submission should include the following documents:
The proposal should be submitted to IOM by email to no later than May 4th 2025. Late submissions will not be reviewed.
Required Experience:
Contract
Full-Time