UN Women, grounded in the vision of equality enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations, works for the elimination of discrimination against women and girls; the empowerment of women; and the achievement of equality between women and men as partners and beneficiaries of development, human rights, humanitarian action and peace and security. Since 2015, the UN Security Council has called for stronger integration of the Women, Peace and Security (WPS), counter-terrorism (CT), and preventing and countering violent extremism (PVE) agendas, notably through resolutions 2242 (2015) and 2467 (2019). The WPS agenda is firmly grounded in international human rights law and constitutes an extension of women’s rights in peace and security contexts, as articulated in the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and CEDAW General Recommendation No. 30, which affirms the applicability of women’s rights obligations in conflict and post-conflict settings. Building on this mandate, UN Women began its systematic engagement with the UN counter-terrorism architecture in 2017, following the establishment of the UN Office of Counter-Terrorism (UNOCT). Its engagement focuses on accelerating the implementation of WPS commitments in contexts affected by terrorism. This support is particularly urgent given the disproportionate impact of terrorism on women and girls, including the strategic targeting of their bodies and rights by designated terrorist organizations. In this context, UN Women places strong emphasis on advancing women’s agency and meaningful participation at all levels of policymaking, including within the UN CT agenda, in light of the well-documented adverse impacts of counter-terrorism laws and practices on women’s rights and their ability to engage in public life. Accordingly, UN Women prioritizes strengthening women’s meaningful participation in CT and PVE processes, ensuring that women’s needs and experiences inform prevention, recovery, and peacebuilding efforts, and supporting protection measures for women in terrorism-affected contexts. UN Women also works to prevent the securitization and instrumentalization of women’s rights and gender institutions. Recent iterations of the United Nations Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy, as well as the Pact for the Future under the peace and security pillar, further reaffirmed the importance of gender analysis and the role of women and civil society in counter-terrorism, further reinforcing UN Women’s normative and operational engagement in this area. Accordingly, UN Women partners with the UN Office of Counter-Terrorism (UNOCT) to ensure gender mainstreaming and gendered approaches to analysis and programmatic assistance provided to national governments and other key stakeholders. UN Women also chairs the UN Global Counter-Terrorism Coordination Compact Working Group on Gender Sensitive Approach to Preventing and Countering Terrorism. UN Women Strategic Plan (2026 – 2029)[1] commit to supporting women increased participation, influence and leadership in counter terrorism as part of its overall offer in women, peace and security, and humanitarian action. Under the guidance and direct supervision of the Counter-Terrorism Specialist, the Programme Analyst contributes to the effective management of UN Women programmes in the HQ by providing inputs to programme design, formulation, implementation and evaluation. The Programme Analyst supports the delivery of UN Women mandate on the thematic area and contributes to the UN engagement in supporting the implementation of the UN Global Counter Terrorism Strategy. The Programme Analyst works in close collaboration with the programme and operations team, UN Women HQ personnel, UN partners, Government officials, multi and bi-lateral donors and civil society ensuring successful UN Women programme implementation under the assigned portfolio.
Stand Out From the Crowd
Upload your resume and get instant feedback on how well it matches this job.
Job Type
Full-time
Career Level
Entry Level
Number of Employees
5,001-10,000 employees