Job Description
Background The Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime (GI-TOC) is an independent civil society organization headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, with a globally dispersed Secretariat working across 42 countries. Founded in 2013, GI-TOC brings together a global network of more than 750 independent experts and a team of over 130 staff dedicated to understanding and responding to organized crime. Through research, analysis, policy engagement and support to civil society actors, GI-TOC works to deepen understanding of organized crime and strengthen effective, rights-based responses. In 2024, GI-TOC produced 167 publications and reached more than 713,000 website users worldwide. The GI-TOC works to: Identify, analyse and map criminal trends and patterns of regional instability, and their impact on illicit flows, governance, development, security, conflict and the rule of law. Connect and support civil society actors working on organized crime and corruption, and on their links to instability and conflict. Strengthen local monitoring and analysis of national, regional and international organized crime and insecurity trends. Job Summary The Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime (GI-TOC) is seeking proposals from qualified consultants, organizations or consortia to support an end-of-project review of a project implemented under its Asia-Pacific Observatory. The assignment will focus specifically on how the project has contributed to policy influence, stakeholder engagement, learning and broader impact within the Asia-Pacific Observatory’s area of work. The assignment is intended to generate a practical understanding of what the project achieved, how its activities and outputs contributed to policy relevance and influence, and what lessons can be applied to future Asia-Pacific Observatory programming. It is not intended as an organization-wide review of GI-TOC, but as targeted support to the Asia-Pacific Observatory and the specific projec