The International Rescue Committee (IRC) responds to the world’s worst humanitarian crises and helps people to survive and rebuild their lives. Founded in 1933 at the request of Albert Einstein, the IRC offers lifesaving care and life-changing assistance to refugees forced to flee from war or disaster. At work today in over 40 countries and 22 U.S. cities, we restore safety, dignity and hope to millions who are uprooted and struggling to endure. The IRC leads the way from harm to home.
We are recruiting to fill the position below:
Job Title: Emergency Preparedness and Response Manager
The Emergency Preparedness and Response (EPR) Manager will provide operational, technical, and coordination support to the Emergency Preparedness and Response Coordinator (EPRCo) in the planning, implementation, and monitoring of emergency preparedness and response activities.
The EPR Manager will actively contribute to strengthening IRC’s readiness to respond to emergencies and ensure timely, effective, and high-quality interventions. In this capacity, the EPR Manager will support the EPRCo in conducting key preparedness and response functions, including risk analysis, contingency planning, emergency assessments, response design, and implementation.
The role will also involve working closely with sector teams, operations, and partners to ensure integrated and efficient program delivery.
In the absence of the EPRCo, or upon delegation, the EPR Manager will assume a leadership role and be responsible for overseeing emergency preparedness and response activities. This includes providing strategic direction, coordinating emergency response efforts, representing the organization in relevant coordination forums, and ensuring alignment with IRC standards, humanitarian principles, and donor requirements.
The EPR Manager will ensure continuity of operations during emergencies, support rapid decision-making, and maintain effective coordination both internally and externally.
The role also requires proactive engagement in resource mobilization, reporting, and learning processes to strengthen the overall emergency response capacity of the country program.
The Emergency Preparedness and Response (EPR) Manager is responsible for leading and coordinating the IRC’s emergency preparedness, contingency planning, and rapid response interventions.
The role ensures timely, effective, and principled humanitarian responses to emergencies, aligned with IRC standards, donor requirements, and international humanitarian frameworks.
Major Responsibilities
The Emergency preparedness and Response manager will support the EPRCo in conducting the following activities and lead whenever the EPRCo is not available or through delegation by the EPRCo.
Emergency Preparedness:
Support the EPRCo in leading the development, review, and implementation of country-level emergency preparedness plans.
Conduct regular risk analysis, hazard mapping, and scenario planning.
Coordinate contingency planning across sectors (health, WASH, protection, ERD, nutrition).
Strengthen early warning systems and preparedness mechanisms.
Build staff capacity in emergency preparedness through training and simulations.
Emergency Response Management:
Lead or coordinate rapid needs assessments in emergency situations.
Develop response strategies, including defining priorities, target populations, and modalities.
Ensure timely implementation of emergency projects in line with IRC standards.
Provide leadership during emergency activation and scale-up phases.
Coordinate emergency response teams and surge staff deployment. Program Quality & Implementation
Ensure all emergency interventions adhere to humanitarian principles (humanity, neutrality, impartiality, independence).
Monitor program quality, relevance, and accountability.
Integrate cross-cutting issues such as gender, protection, safeguarding, and inclusion.
Ensure compliance with IRC technical standards and sector guidelines. Coordination & Representation
Represents IRC in national and sub-national emergency coordination forums (e.g., clusters, working groups).
Strengthen partnerships with government authorities, UN agencies, NGOs, and local actors.
Support inter-agency coordination and joint response planning.
Resource Mobilization:
Identify funding opportunities and contribute to proposal development.
Develop emergency concept notes, budgets, and logframes.
Liaise with donors and contribute to grant reporting