Area-Based Coordination (ABC) Coordinator - Sudan

Tags: English Environment
  • Added Date: Monday, 23 June 2025
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Background

The Cash Consortium of Sudan (CCS) is a collaborative platform of over 20 international and national NGOs working to strengthen multi-sectoral humanitarian programming, improve coordination, and increase collective impact across Sudan, hosted by Mercy Corps. In the current crisis context, formal coordination mechanisms are inconsistent or absent across many parts of Darfur. To address these critical gapsโ€”particularly at the state levelโ€”the CCS is supporting the operationalization of Area-Based Coordination (ABC) mechanisms in priority states. These platforms are designed to strengthen field-level programmatic alignment, ensuring a space for INGOs, NNGOs, UN, private sector and local responders to jointly assess, plan, and coordinate across sectors and cross border operations.

The ABC approach is field-driven, neutral, independent and inclusive. It is hosted operationally through CCS partner agencies at the state level and is designed to complementโ€”rather than replaceโ€”existing structures such as the cluster system at sub-national level, the INGO Forum, and the Emergency Response Mechanism (ERM) and any other relevant groups. The model also aligns with sub-national coordination systems such as the A-ICCG, ensuring coherence and a strong feedback loop from the field to national decision-making. By strengthening multi-sectoral service mapping, facilitating referral systems, and enabling joint planning among diverse actors, the ABC model fills a critical coordination gap in Sudanโ€™s humanitarian landscapeโ€”particularly in hard-to-reach and conflict-affected areas with very high needs. The ABC Coordinator role is designed to be an enabler and fully complementary to existing humanitarian coordination structures. Technical leadership and strategic guidance remain under the purview of the cluster system and relevant national frameworks, with ABCs serving as a field-level coordination interface to strengthen coherence.

Purpose / Project Description

The ABC Coordinator will serve as a neutral convener of multi-sectoral humanitarian coordination at the state level. This role is central to supporting collective planning, identifying and addressing service gaps, improving referral pathways, and strengthening the interoperability between emergency response and longer-term programming.

Each ABC Coordinator will act as the anchor of the area-based coordination structure in their designated state and will engage with OCHA sub office for the state This includes managing a regular forum for all active humanitarian actors on the ground, coordinating closely with the SI-led ERM, and 48 Hr. ERRM team, and any other relevant groups, facilitating links with the A-ICCG relevant cluster FPs and the INGO Forumโ€™s access and advocacy functions. The coordinator, in collaboration with OCHA, will ensure that the rapid needs assessments inform broader planning, that clusters are engaged to support cluster-specific coordination and technical harmonization, and that all humanitarian actorsโ€”regardless of consortium membershipโ€”can participate in and benefit from joint planning and alignment processes.

ABC Coordinators will ensure that existing national and cluster-level tools, SOPs, and coordination protocols apply. Any local contextualization or adaptation will be done in consultation with OCHA and elevated to the ICCG where needed, in line with IASC guidance. The supporting role of the position requires strong facilitation, diplomacy, coordination, and contextual knowledge of the humanitarian landscape in Sudan.

This is not an implementation or oversight roleโ€”it is a facilitative coordination role of field-based staff, embedded in an operational agency, acting on behalf of the wider collective response.

Objectives of the Position

  • To coordinate field based multi-sectoral humanitarian actors at the state level around a shared area strategy, aligned with local needs, contextual dynamics, and clusters overall strategies and plans.

  • To ensure that emergency assessments (e.g., ERM) feed into inclusive, programmatic planning for sustained and complementary response.

  • To promote interoperability between coordination structures (ABC, ERM, clusters, INGO Forum and OCHA), tools, and planning processes.

  • To strengthen real-time service mapping, identify gaps and overlaps, and ensure joint problem-solving around constraints.

  • To ensure an inclusive coordination model that reflects the needs and capacities of INGOs, NNGOs, local responders, UN and stakeholders.

  • To ensure that field-level coordination efforts are formally linked with national and sub-national clusters through established reporting and planning channels.

    Key Responsibilities

    1. Programmatic Coordination & Strategic Alignment

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