Background The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) is the world's largest humanitarian organization, with 192 member National Societies. As part of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, our work is guided by seven fundamental principles; humanity, impartiality, neutrality, independence, voluntary service, unity and universality. Organizational Context The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC or “the Federation”) is the world’s largest volunteer-based humanitarian network. The Federation is a membership organisation established by and comprised of its member National Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. Along with National Societies and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), the Federation is part of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement. The Federation is served by a Secretariat based in Geneva, with regional and country offices throughout the world. The Secretariat is led by the IFRC Secretary General and provides the central capacity of the International Federation to serve, connect, and represent National Societies. IFRC Country Delegation in Myanmar is part of the Asia-Pacific Regional set-up and its role and mandate in Myanmar are defined as support to the Myanmar Red Cross (MRCS) in programme/service delivery, international resource mobilisation, ensuring quality and accountability to donors, coordination of NSD/BD activities towards MRCS development and ensuring effective implementation of the Annual Operational Plans agreed with the MRCS. Rakhine Program Myanmar RC Society (MRCS) has been responding to the violence and displacement crisis in Rakhine since 2012 through relief distributions, WASH, mobile health clinics, temporary shelter and first aid. Since 2014 MRCS has supported livelihoods for populations indirectly affected by the violence in Sittwe and Minbya townships. In 2017, with IFRC support, MRCS initiated multi-year community-based multi-sector resilience programs in central areas of Rakhine and community based programming in northern areas of Rakhine. CRP has created learning and innovation opportunities for livelihoods approaches in recurrent disaster and conflict affected contexts and in cash grant modalities applied to WASH and health interventions. MRCS, with IFRC support, implements Emergency Response and Recovery and Livelihood Restoration Programs, targeting affected populations with unconditional cash grants for immediate relief assistance, as well as conditional cash grants for income generating activities, technical trainings and unconditional grants for basic needs. Livelihoods and cash programming expertise and lessons learned developed in the Rakhine context, is relevant to these programs with scope for short term technical inputs from the Livelihoods Delegate from base in Rakhine State (Sittwe). In the current year program, the country programming context and priority will be influenced by IFRC global strategy 2030, which places climate change and environmental crisis. This will include reinforcing the IFRC Myanmar focus on resilience building & influencing- resilient livelihood development at community level, power in market for women small holders/ small producers, promotion of medium to longer term livelihood programming and engaging with market system.