Accountability
Accountability
Image above: UNHCR and UNICEF Joint Townhall meeting on the prevention and response to sexual misconduct with UNHCR High Commissioner Filippo Grandi and UNICEF Executive Director Henriette Fore.
UNHCR works systematically to identify and reduce risks of sexual exploitation, abuse and harassment, in all its operations. Eradicating sexual misconduct requires us to pay attention to the values and attitudes that underpin our behaviours and the structures or systems that support or reinforce these behaviours. One of such systems is the recruitment of staff and vetting and reference checking.
Vetting and Reference Checking
UNHCR has taken measures, both internally and through interagency efforts, to ensure that perpetrators of sexual misconduct cannot move within the organization or from one UN organization to another.
We have amended our recruitment form to include specific questions on misconduct and self-certification that enablesus to sanction anyone trying to misrepresent him/herself. We were among the first agencies to roll out the United Nations “ClearCheck” trackers, launched in June 2018. ClearCheck is a screening database used to share information amongst UN entities, system-wide, on individuals (former UN staff and UN related personnel) who were found to have engaged in sexual misconduct, or who resigned or otherwise seperated from service while there were pending allegations against them related to, sexual harassment, sexual exploitation and sexual abuse. This process aims to prevent re-employing them within the UN system. This database is managed centrally by the UN’s Department of Management Strategy, Policy and Compliance, One HR Service. To learn more about ClearCheck, follow this link.
UNHCR is also seeking synergies with NGO partners on similar initiatives such as the “Misconduct disclosure scheme” developed by the Steering Committee for Humanitarian Response. In November 2021 UNHCR, together with OneHR and SCHR, embarked on the first phase of piloting the Misconduct Disclosure Scheme. Piloting will be crucial for UNHCR to better understand the impact and ensure that current vetting and reference checking procedures are properly prepared to absorb this important step in the recruitment process.
Reporting misconduct
We strive to ensure that reporting mechanisms are known, accessible and trusted, and that victims who report sexual misconduct feel safe and protected. We have reinforced mechanisms to ensure that cases of sexual exploitation and abuse are reported, using a range of complaints mechanisms, including face to face engagement, mobile phone technology and call centres.
UNHCR’s Inspector General’s Office is an independent internal oversight body. To report misconduct, follow the link here.
The SpeakUp! Helpline is a confidential independent helpline available to UNHCR colleagues who wish to report misconduct or obtain advice on what to do when in doubt. The helpline is managed by an external provider and is available 24/7 by phone, through a web form and a mobile application. It offers the possibility to report in complete anonymity.
UNHCR Colleagues may also contact the Victim Care Officer as the first port-of-call in relation to concerns over sexual harassment. She provides confidential guidance on processes and services supports decision making, accompanies victims through the process, provides psychosocial support, coordinates action on their behalf, as well as assesses risks and individual needs. She also provides guidance to witnesses and advice to managers on support and risk mitigation for sexual harassment.
Messages written by women survivors of sexual and gender-based violence are displayed in artwork on the walls of the Cotopaxi Reception House – a safe house for refugee and Ecuadorian women in the city of Salcedo, Ecuador.
© UNHCR/Jaime Giménez