Background

Despite the global significance of its biodiversity, Swaziland’s formal Protected Area (PA) estate is comprised of relatively small and vulnerable PAs, covering only 3.9% of the country and inadequately representing the countries varied ecosystems. There is therefore a need to expand the PA estate, while strengthening PA management competencies. This will in turn require the participation of a broad range of stakeholders, including private landholders, local communities and the tourism industry, to establish new State PA, private and community managed reserves. A landscape approach is needed, to strategically place these different PAs in proximity to one another, and manage land in immediately adjacent areas to reduce threats to biodiversity and improve connectivity between the PA sites. The long term solution is that Swaziland adopts a landscape conservation paradigm that allows a broader range of stakeholders to work together to manage biodiversity more effectively.

Under this approach, PAs will be established and managed in critical biodiversity areas as clusters—different sites managed by the State, private landowners and communities in proximity to one another. These PAs will need to be managed as part of a matrix of land uses across landscapes that allow biodiversity management objectives to be integrated in the strategies, production practices and decisions of a range of land and resource users occupying land immediately adjacent to PAs (and between them—so as to maintain functional corridors).

The project’s goal is to strengthen the management effectiveness of the PA system of Swaziland to ensure a viable set of representative samples of the country’s full range of natural ecosystems are conserved, through a network of PAs. The project objective is to effectively expand, manage and develop Swaziland’s protected area network in order to adequately protect the biodiversity and landscapes of the country. This will involve devising a system of integrating land and natural resource management that transforms the current PA patchwork into a protected areas network, while creating incentives for all Swazis (land management agencies, conservancies, private landowners and tourism operators) to work together toward conservation and sustainable economic development.

In order to achieve the project goal and objective , the project’s interventions have been organised in three components:

  • Component 1: Knowledge based platform operationalised at the National and regional level to address current and emerging threats to PAs and biodiversity conservation;
  • Component 2: Landscape approach operationalised and leads to expansion of PA network;
  • Component 3: Strengthening PA functioning through improved Conservation management and Operational support for existing and new PAs, including both formal and informal PAs.

Objective

The SNTC seeks the services of the two Project Managers to work closely with and report to the National Project Manager in providing oversight and technical support and advice in all projects are sought.

Duties and Responsibilities

The Project Managers will be working under the full guidance and report to the National Project Manager and will be guided by the Project Technical Advisor:

  • Provide technical and strategic assistance to the SNTC CEO, Director of National Parks, National Project Manager and other counterparts in areas of project management and planning, in particular the development of annual work plans, monitoring progress, providing quality assurance for outputs, and ensuring that annual, mid-term and end-of-project targets will be met;
  • Bring technical experiences to project planning and implementation to ensure that full use is made of global and national lessons learned, and that best practices are used to achieve the project goal of realising sustainable PA management within the landscape context, securing biodiversity and ecosystem services;
  • Provide technical support to the National Project Manager in preparing terms of reference for consultants and sub-contractors, and provide assistance in the selection process;
  • Provide technical support to the community co-ordinators for target landscape level activities;
  • Provide technical support to the National Project Manager in coordinating the work of all consultants and sub-contractors, ensuring timely and quality delivery of expected outputs, effective synergy among the various sub-contracted activities, and integration of project outputs into Government work;
  • Provide technical support for management of site activities, monitoring, and impact assessment, as well as technical support in the areas of: inter alia, biodiversity conservation, strategic planning, landscape planning and associated institutional capacity development, PA integration and mainstreaming, as well as conservation finance;
  • Assist and advise the SNTC and relevant government departments in key strategic and policy issues related to biodiversity, protected areas, institutional strengthening processes, and appropriate monitoring and evaluation systems and knowledge management systems;
  • Assist the SNTC and National Project Manager with technical input in preparation of the inception report, Combined Project Implementation Review / Annual Project Report, and technical reports for submission to UNDP, the GEF, other donors and the Government, as required;
  • Assist the SNTC and National Project Manager in mobilizing staff and consultants in the conduct of a mid-term project review, and in undertaking revisions in the implementation programme and strategy, based on evaluation results;
  • Provide capacity building support to the SNTC and relevant government department staff and SNTC PA managers;
  • Assist the SNTC and National Project Manager in liaison work with project partners, donor organizations, NGOs and other groups to ensure effective coordination of project activities, and coordination with local, national and international complementary projects and programmes;
  • Support the National Project Manager in documenting lessons learned through implementation of the project and assist in making recommendations to the PB for more effective implementation and coordination of project activities;
  • Produce policy briefing papers and technical reports to support decision-making processes, advocacy and knowledge management;
  • Perform other tasks as may be requested by the Project Board, SNTC and Project Manager.

Competencies

Functional Competencies:

  • Good knowledge of international best practice in PA landscape planning and management, and conservation in general and experience with multi-stakeholder implementation is desirable;
  • Previous experience with GEF projects is an advantage;
  • Skill and experience with spatial planning (including GIS use) is an advantage;
  • Ability to effectively network, project management and coordinate a multidisciplinary team of experts and consultants;
  • Effective negotiator;
  • Excellent written communication skills including the ability to prepare clear technical and management reports;
  • Strong computer skills, in particular mastery of all applications of the MS Office package and internet search.

Required Skills and Experience

Education:

  • A Master's degree (preferably MSc.) in a subject related to protected area management and conservation planning and Management or Natural Resource Management, Environmental Sciences, Development Studies or related discipline;
  • Additional qualification in project management will be an added advantage.

Experience:

  • At least 7 years of professional experience in conservation planning and management and eco-tourism and proven ability to work with multiple stakeholders;
  • Demonstrable experience in the implementation of multilateral donor funded or government funded international development projects with strong skills in monitoring and evaluation;
  • Demonstrable experience in project organization and ability to serve as effective negotiator.

Language:

  • Excellent command of English.