From: International Organization/UN Studies Specialization Date: March 7, 2023 Subject: Int'l Organizations & UN News #8/2023
International Organizations and UN News #8/2023 - March 7, 2023
Dear IO/UNS Community,
The IO/UNS team would like to wish you all a happy Women's History Month and upcoming International Women's day! Since yesterday and through 17 March, the 67th session of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) considers the priority theme of "Innovation and technological change, and education in the digital age for achieving gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls". Make sure to check out the many UN events in honor of women and discussing gender issues. Also don't forget to keep up with the 5th United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries (LDC5) which started on Sunday!
In this newsletter, you will find:
News from the UN
Event Recap: Palestine Refugees and the Role of UNRWA
Event Recap: International Fellows Meeting with UN Dignitaries
What We're Listening To: Resurgence of The Gambia – A small country with big ambitions
Events at SIPA and Beyond
Internship Opportunities
Daniel, Laura, Asha & Aurelian
IO/UNS Specialization Team
**Please note this message is clipped. You can open the message in a new browser to see full event and internship listings.
The outcome of the the Commission on the Status of Women’s consideration of the priority theme during its 67th session will take the form of agreed conclusions, to be negotiated by all Member States. You can read the Zero Draft of the CSW67 Agreed Conclusion on Innovation and technological change, and education in the digital age for achieving gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls here. (NB: the 'zero draft' is the initial version of the document that serves as the basis for negotiations and discussions among member states. It is not the final outcome.) For more information on the Commission, see the CSW conference website.
For the first time ever, there are women MPs in every single country on Earth, the Interparliamentary Union, IPU, said on Friday. In its latest annual report, the global body dedicated to promoting peace through parliamentary diplomacy and dialogue, also said that women’s participation has never been as diverse as it is in many countries today. The findings are based on data from the 47 countries that held elections last year. These polls saw women take an average of 25.8 per cent of the seats available, representing a 2.3 percentage point increase, since elections were last held. Read more here.
On Feb 27, the negotiations for a new UN High Seas or Ocean Treaty enter the final week, based on a new draft Treaty text, published this past Saturday. As almost two-thirds of the world’s ocean lies outside national boundaries, this large part of the planet is unprotected from overfishing and exploitation. The envisioned treaty aims at creating such protections to safeguard the ocean’s biodiversity, among other by creating a legal framework for high sea marine protected areas (MPAs). Read more here.
At the Summit of Least Developed Countries (LDCs) in Doha, Qatar, ahead of the Fifth UN Conference on the Least Developed Countries, known as LDC5, UN Secretary-General António Guterres on Saturday urged the international community – particularly wealthy nations – to step up and help the more than 1.1 billion people in LDCs break out of “vicious cycles” and lift themselves out of poverty: “Countries with the least need support the most. And you need it now. You represent one in eight people on earth. But your countries are trapped in vicious cycles that make development difficult, if not impossible." Read more here.
“I have rarely been so disturbed and heartbroken,” saidWHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus after visiting earthquake-ravaged northwest Syria last Wednesday. He is the first senior UN official to enter the region since war erupted in the country 12 years ago this month. He underlined WHO's commitment to continue to assist Syrians but urged greater international support for the recovery and rebuilding efforts. Read more here.
Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, tens of thousands of people have been killed and maimed on Ukrainian soil, many Ukrainian cities have been reduced to rubble, and their inhabitants forced to flee; UN investigations have found evidence of war crimes. As well as causing untold suffering for the people of Ukraine, the consequences of Russia’s invasion of the country have spread far beyond the two nations, fuelling alarming cost increases and product shortages, and creating food shortages around the world. The UN has led efforts to manage the huge humanitarian crisis resulting from the war and to find a path to peace. Read more here.
Event Recap: Palestine Refugees and the Role of UNRWA
On Thursday, March 2nd, Greta Gunnarsdottir, Director of the UNRWA's Representative Office in New York City and Silvia Delgado, UNRWA Senior Liaison Officer at SIPA shared insights on programs and activities by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA). In conversation with SIPA Professor Marc Jacquand, the discussion brought to the forefront the specific approaches and actities through which UNRWA engages in education, vocational training, health care, relief and social services, and microfinance for Palestine refugees. The guest speakers highlighted the importance of the agency in providing camp infrastructure and improvement and emergency assistance, including in times of armed conflict, while acknowledging the challening context in which its programs are being implemented.
Event Recap: SIPA's International Fellows Meet with UN Dignitaries
On Friday, March 3, the International Fellows Program (IFP) held its annual "UN Day" meetings with top officials from several permanent missions to the UN. This year's meetings included candid off-the-record discussions with Ambassador Maged Abdelaziz from the League of Arab States, Minister Felix Boateng from Ghana, and Ambassador Ronaldo Costa from Brazil. Professor Stuart Gottlieb and the 30-member IFP cohort also engaged in a lunchtime discussion with Eva d'Ambrosio, a U.S. Foreign Service Officer and this year's Davis Fellow at SIPA, and Dr. Jean Krasno, a Columbia Political Science lecturer and longtime UN adviser and practitioner. The day ended with cocktails at the Delegates Lounge at the UN, including several pop-in guests, consisting mostly of SIPA alumni now working at the UN.
The Lid is On: Resurgence of The Gambia – A small country with big ambitions
The Gambia, the smallest country on the African mainland, and one of the least developed countries in the world, has been going through a transition to full democracy since 2017, the end of a two-decade long dictatorship.
In the first episode of a mini-series recorded in The Gambia, Conor Lennon talks to Niania Dabo-Tourey, the country head of the UN Capital Development Fund (UNCDF, one of several UN agencies accompanying the country on this journey), about the ways they are supporting rural communities to adapt to the climate crisis, learn the skills they will need to start new businesses, and grow the economy in a sustainable way.
We are proud of the critical views and relevant experiences of our IO/UNS specializers. To give each other a platform and a better appreciation of our goals and ideas, we are looking for volunteers to shed a spotlight on in our weekly newsletter communications and post on our Twitter account (@UNatColumbia). We hope these spotlights will help foster an even better understanding of our IO/UNS community and share your inspirations for pursuing an education in multilateralism and global governance. We know that each of you has something to offer. Don't be shyplease fill out our questionnaire here - we'd love to shine a light on you!
Spotlighted events
TODAY, Mar 7, 2023, 1 PM – 2 PM EST Lunch Time Talk with Radha Kulkarni
IAB 402
5th United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries (LDC5)
The world’s Least Developed Countries are in a race to deliver crucial global development goals by 2030.ÔÇ»This new decade needs to usher in a new global partnership to secure a better future for the world’s most vulnerable nations.ÔÇ»ÔÇ»
The main conference in Doha, Qatar on 5-9 March, 2023, which will identify actions and partnerships at the highest possible level, including Heads of State and Government, to deliver on this agenda. 74/232B.
At the second part of LDC5, gathered leaders will:ÔÇ»
Undertake a comprehensive appraisal of the implementation of the Istanbul PoA;
Mobilize additional international support measures and action in favour of LDCs; and
Agree on a renewed partnership between LDCs and their development partners to overcome structural challenges, eradicate poverty, achieve internationally agreed development goals and enable graduation from the LDC category.
Navigating the UN System: A SIPA Graduate's Perspective (Radha Kulkarni, MPA/EPD '17)
Join EPD and IO/UNS in a lunch talk with Radha Kulkarni (MPA/EPD 2017), Investment Manager, Innovative Finance Hub, Office of Innovation at UNICEF and is receiving the 2023 Emerging Leader Award at SIPA's Alumni Day later this March. Radha will give her insights on navigating the UN System from a SIPA Graduate's Perspective.
United Nations Headquarters (Conference Room 1, 405 E 42nd St, New York, NY 10017, United States) and online
Unlocking the Future of Gender Equality and Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights Through Technology
On March 8, the Center for Reproductive Rights and Fòs Feminista will host a side event to the 67th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women titled “Unlocking the Future of Gender Equality and Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights Through Technology.” Moderated by the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Health and co-sponsored by the Permanent Missions of Spain, Nepal and Luxembourg, this event will explore how emerging technologies can expand access to reproductive health information and services—and the legal, policy and human rights implications of these new digital tools.
Online Feminist Foreign Policy-Making as a Diverse Tool to Strengthen Multilateralism: Lessons Learned and Opportunities
The goal of achieving gender equality and the empowerment of women, adolescents and girls in all their diversity is embedded at the heart of the international community's efforts to address the most pressing global issues. The side event will serve to exchange about different approaches to Feminist Foreign Policymaking in different countries and regions.
The objective of the event is for participants to share best practices, lessons learned and challenges regarding the drafting, development and implementation of their respective feminist foreign policies, or feminist approaches to foreign policy. The event aims to provide insights on the different ways in which Feminist Foreign Policies can be a tool that is shaped under diverse national contexts and that responds to different priorities at the multilateral level.
Online STEM/Policy Career Pathways in International Organizations
How can students on the new STEM track at SIPA make the most of their visa advantages and technical skills to flourish in a career at international organisations like the World Bank and the United Nations?
This United Nations Association (SIPA-UNA) event will feature four SIPA alum who have just done that, come and learn more from their experiences in this route. The event will start with a presentation by Michael Goldstein giving a general overview of visa routes for international students.
International Organizations & United Nations Roundtable Conversations (Networking Event)
Building on the success of the previous years' event, this year's in-person International Organizations & United Nations Roundtable Conversations gives students the opportunity to speak with 20+ staff members from a range of international organizations in intimate small group discussions. Invited experts represent UNDP, IOM, DPPA, World Bank, UNFPA, DESA, OCHA, OECD, ILO, and many others.
Unlike other networking events, the virtual roundtable conversation format will ensure that students have significant facetime with three IO officials, opening the door for meaningful relationship building. About six students will share a roundtable with one of our featured experts to discuss their work and experiences on the role of international organizations to foster development, cooperation, peace, human rights, climate change, and prosperity. Students will spend 30min each at three roundtables to enable them to have a range of conversations.
After 3 rounds of structured roundtables, all participants are invited to join the reception on the 15th floor that allows participants to connect with other experts.
Ever wondered how to get a job at the UN? Wondering how the UN recruitment process works and how best to prepare for the UN interview?
In this IO/UNS Career Talk, Professor Daniel Naujoks, director of SIPA's International Organization and UN Studies specialization, shares key pointers on how you can use your time at SIPA to:
Build expertise & a hirable profile (skill & resume-building)
Build & nurture networks
Understand processes, paperwork, & markers to land one of the coveted jobs at the UN.
SIPA students have the option to attend in person or online (see the different registration options).
How to keep the United Nations Environmental Agenda in Times of Crisis
The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic has shaken political institutions and the ways they prioritize some issues over others. In the United Nations system divided into programs and agencies working on separate issue areas, such a crisis challenges those in charge of promoting long-term concerns. Professor Lucile Maertens and Dr. Luis Rivera-Vélez from the University of Lausanne share insights into how UN actors keep an issue, which is not seen as a priority, on the agenda in times of crisis? Based on an investigation of the UN environmental agenda in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, Maertens and Rivera-Vélez highlight the practices through which UN staff attempts to maintain the environment on the agenda at the operational and policy levels.
In conversation with Daniel Naujoks, Director, International Organization & UN Studies, School of International and Public Affairs and Fabien Cottier, Postdoctoral Research Scientist, Center for International Earth Science Information Network of Columbia University.
Columbia students, faculty and staff may attend in person; others please join us virtually. Please see the different registration options.
Most SIPA students are not only required to participate in a specialization-related internship, UN-related internships are often critical to further develop skills and knowledge, build a hireable CV, and create or expand a meaningful professional network. Feel free to consult this document for tips and tricks for Sourcing Internships.
UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs - Junior Program Officer (JPO) Programme Application Deadline: 15 March, 2023
The main objective of the JPO Programme is to provide young professionals with the opportunity to gain hands-on experience in the field of multilateral international cooperation through a learning experience under the supervision of specialists, and to contribute to the advancement and furtherance of their organization’s mandate, particularly with regard to the Sustainable Development Goals/ 2030 Agenda. The JPO Programme recruits Junior Professional Officers (formerly known as Associate Experts) for the UN Secretariat. JPOs are recruited under bilateral agreements between the UN and donor countries. There are currently 4 vacancies open to US Citizens.
For more information and to apply for vacancies sponsored by the United States,click here.
To check for JPO vacancies sponsored by other countries, click here.
Executive Office of the Secretary-General - Interns Application Deadline: 11 April 2023
The United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs (UNODA) is seeking motivated interns to support the work of the Executive Office of the Secretary-General. The interns can take up assignments with any team in the Office, including the Strategic Planning and Monitoring Unit; the Political, Peacekeeping, Humanitarian and Human Rights Unit; the Rule of Law Unit; the Sustainable Development Unit; the Policy Advisor’s Office; or other units.
Interns report to full-time professional staff and focus on one of the three tracks set out under Responsibilities.
UN Department of Management Strategy, Policy and Compliance Office of Human Resources - HR Intern Application Deadline: 31 May 2023
The Organizational Development Section within the Office of Human Resources (OHR), Department of Management Strategy, Policy and Compliance (DMSPC), of the United Nations in New York is seeking interns who are interested in joining a very dynamic and international office that is mandated to identify and respond to Organizational learning and development needs.
To address an ongoing need, they are seeking several interns specializing in a range of areas including Communications, Marketing, Visual Design, Data Visualization, Video Production, Instructional Design, Knowledge Management, Diversity and Inclusion, Human Resources, Finance and budgeting, and/or other fields such as Industrial/Organizational/Occupational Psychology.
The internships are UNPAID and full-time. Interns normally work five days per week (35 hours) under the supervision of a Staff Development Officer, and typically work as a team of interns who support various projects throughout the Section and Division.
Department of Economic and Social Affairs - Economic Affairs Interns Application Deadline: 04 June 2023
The internship with the Inter-organizational and Inter-institutional Support Branch (IISB) of the Office of Intergovernmental Support and Coordination for Sustainable Development (OISC) of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN-DESA) is for two months, with an opportunity for extension, pending on the needs of the Department.
The internship is UNPAID and full time.
Interns work five days per week (35 hours) under the supervision of a staff member in IISB to which they are assigned.
Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights - Human Rights Intern Application Deadline: 29 June 2023
The intern shall support OHCHR in fulfilling its mission: to work for the protection of all human rights for all people; to help empower people to realize their rights; and to assist those responsible for upholding such rights in ensuring that they are implemented.
This internship is an UNPAID and full-time engagement that provides a framework through which students from diverse academic backgrounds gain exposure to the work of the United Nations by way of their service within Secretariat entities.
Based in New York, United States of America, under the overall leadership of the High Commissioner, the intern reports to the respective Chief of Section or Human Rights Officer in the area of assignment. This internship will be offered for an initial period of two (2) months, renewable for a combined period of six (6) months.