Evaluating the UN system amidst growing global complexity

Ahmad Ullah Qazi, from Pakistan, serves as a UN Volunteer international specialist with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Regional Office in Bangkok. He started his assignment in November 2024 as Regional Evaluation Associate for Asia and the Pacific region, where he supports the evaluation function of UNESCO across 6 regional and 14 field offices. His focus is to improve the quality of evaluations, enhance their use in programming and decision-making, and support the implementation of UNESCO’s evaluation policy and guidelines across field units and relevant programmes.

The United Nations Evaluation Group (UNEG) and United Nations Volunteers (UNV) collaborate on a programme where young professionals under the age of 35 serve as evaluators. Initiated by UNEG Young and Emerging Evaluators Working Group to provide learning and career growth for youth keen to join the UN, while also ensuring their voices are included in UN evaluation processes.

Bringing not only vaccines, but trust and hope

At the Integrated Health Center of Birnin Gueza in Maradi, a young mother named Amina stood uncertain as health workers approached. Her daughter, Salamatou, had never received a vaccine. Fear and hesitation lingered—until a conversation with Nana Nazifa Hamissou Garba, a UN Volunteer nurse deployed with the World Health Organization (WHO), changed everything. “I feel more confident now to protect my daughter against polio,” Amina said, her voice filled with relief. Amina’s story is just one of many unfolding across Niger, where the fight against polio rages on in the communities most at risk.

In June 2025, Dr. Mahamadou Nouri Kassimoune Tago and Nana Nazifa Hamissou Garba joined a cohort of 40 UN Volunteer Specialists supporting WHO's vaccination drive under the emergency response framework. Together, they work in districts where reaching children is both most urgent and most challenging—bringing not just vaccines, but trust and hope. 

"Disability is not a limitation"—voices that shift systems

Ekaete Judith Umoh’s arrival at the United Nations House in Abuja marked more than just a new job—it signaled a shift. She is the first Inclusion Coordinator in the United Nations Resident Coordinators Offices (UNRCO). As she rolled through the gates, a wheelchair user, Judith, was greeted by a gesture of respect. She is one of many persons with disabilities across West and Central Africa, who are taking on volunteer assignments for key roles within the UN system, turning inclusion from theory into practice

Meet Judith from Nigeria

Refusing to be erased—a volunteer’s voice from Gaza

“We are not just numbers or headlines. We are people: mothers, fathers, children—trying to survive and protect one another in impossible conditions. The world must see us, hear us, and stand with humanity. Support humanitarian work. Advocate for safe access. And most importantly, don’t let Gaza be forgotten.” Twenty-seven-year-old Tasneem Aboalkomboz, a general physician, shares the realities of serving as a UN Volunteer in the besieged coastal strip. Tasneem is from Gaza and started her assignment with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)’s Programme of Assistance to the Palestinian People as a Project Coordinator Assistant on 5 June 2025.

“The levels of death and destruction in Gaza are without parallel in recent times. Day after day, our efforts are being blocked, delayed, and denied. This is unacceptable.” UN Secretary-General António Guterres says, while highlighting the clear obligations for the occupying power, Israel. He calls Gaza a man-made disaster, a moral indictment, and a failure of humanity itself. “People are starving.

Hitting the right notes with communication

Meet Liu Shanshan, a postgraduate student from China specializing in Hindi literature at Guangdong University of Foreign Studies. In September 2024, Liu traded textbooks for hands-on experience in international development, joining the UN system as a UN Volunteer with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) at the Regional Office for South Asia. Her volunteer assignment was funded by the Chinese Young Volunteers Association (CYVA) and aimed to highlight youth voices in peace and justice.
 

Liu served as a Communications Assistant with UNODC from September 2024 to March 2025, focusing on Sustainable Development Goal 16: Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions. Originally assigned to New Delhi, Liu faced unexpected visa delays that kept her working remotely for several months. Undeterred, she continued collaborating across borders until she finally landed in Kathmandu, Nepal—her first experience of UN life on the ground.

Guardians of the forest—Gabon’s green resistance

Gabon is green—over 88 percent of its land is forest. Thirteen national parks guard an 11 percent chunk of it. But protecting nature isn’t just about drawing lines on a map. It’s about the people who live there, depend on it, and fight to keep it alive. Twenty-two UN Volunteers, including members of the Pygmy community, one of Gabon’s most underrepresented groups, are at the heart of Transformation of Forest Landscape Governance in the Bas Ogooué – Lower Nyanga Corridor, a six-year initiative backed by the Global Environment Facility and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). 

The initiative focuses on protecting forests—vital for wildlife, climate, and the communities that depend on them. It also supports the government’s ongoing efforts, launched in 2022, to strengthen forest management across Gabon. Working in 17 rural communities, these UN Volunteers gather local knowledge, lead discussions, and share practical tips on how to protect the environment.

From barbeque smoke to saving the environment

"Could the charcoal smoke from Zibo barbecue be affecting air quality in cities?" This was literally what led me to explore a volunteer assignment with the United Nations, says Haoming Hong from Jiangxi province. At that time, a nationwide trend was sweeping across China: the booming popularity of Zibo-style barbecue. While others enjoyed the trend, Haoming dug into data—using stats to uncover the environmental cost behind the craze. The early exploration turned into a course paper that, in retrospect, laid the foundation for his bachelor’s thesis, The Impact of Air Pollution on Women’s Fertility Intentions in China. 

Haoming connects the dots from there to his volunteer journey as a fully funded UN Volunteer. He adds, "Through this graduate work, I realized that environmental issues are deeply intertwined with public health, economic behaviour, and social development.

Where time stands still: Life in Dzaleka Refugee Camp

The first time I walked through Dzaleka Refugee Camp in Malawi, I felt the weight of time. This camp was never meant to be permanent, yet decades later, tens of thousands of people still call it home. Children are born here. Young people grow up here. Families live entire lives here. For many, there is no going back. At the same time, host communities around the camp share the same pressures—scarce resources, climate shocks, and the daily challenge of building a future with too little support.

My name is Zahra Vaziri. I am from Iran. I serve as a UN Volunteer Associate Programme Officer with the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in Malawi. My role is to help ensure that humanitarian projects are not only implemented, but that they bring dignity, opportunity, and hope to both refugees and the communities that host them. I also make sure that the projects we design and fund are not only implemented but also carry meaning for the people who live here.