Global Health Full-time

Sexual Reproductive Health/Maternal Health Specialist

United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA)

Location

Remote

Type

Full-time

Posted

Jan 11, 2026

Mission

What you will drive

Core responsibilities:

  • Plan, implement, and monitor Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights programs in collaboration with state office staff, government, and implementing partners
  • Provide technical assistance and contribute to the development of work plans for sexual and reproductive health and emergency obstetric care activities
  • Establish and maintain collaborative relationships with government counterparts, implementing partners, and civil society organizations to address emerging SRHR issues
  • Monitor SRH program and financial implementation, conduct site visits to project sites, and ensure quality implementation of interventions

Impact

The difference you'll make

This role contributes to UNFPA's transformative results of ending preventable maternal deaths and ending unmet need for family planning, directly improving sexual and reproductive health outcomes for women and girls in Sudan.

Profile

What makes you a great fit

Required qualifications:

  • Master's Degree with 5 years of experience in relevant field
  • Fluency in both Arabic and English languages
  • Experience in sexual and reproductive health programming, emergency obstetric care, and rights-based service delivery
  • Experience working with government counterparts, implementing partners, and civil society organizations in development contexts

Benefits

What's in it for you

Fixed-term contract for 1 year with possibility for extension, full-time position at NOC grade level within the UN system. No specific salary, compensation, or additional benefits mentioned in the posting.

About

Inside United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA)

UNFPA is the lead UN agency for delivering a world where every pregnancy is wanted, every childbirth is safe and every young person's potential is fulfilled, focusing on ending preventable maternal deaths, unmet need for family planning, and gender-based violence.