UNHCR reviews

3.8

72% would recommend to a friend

(841 total reviews)
avatar

António Guterres

75% approve of CEO

60% positive business outlook

UNHCR has an employee rating of 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 841 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The UNHCR employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the ONG y Organizaciones sin fines de lucro industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

841 reviews
3.0
May 18, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good opportunities to enhance your career

Cons

Extremely low income for the responsibilities and experience they require from you.

1.0
Dec 4, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It is the perfect job if you like speaking with people from all over the world and identifying those who are refugees. An interest in sociology, world geography, political science, international humanitarian and international refugee law would be most helpful in your work. Applicants for international protection approach UNHCR to tell their stories and it was our jobs as Eligibility Caseworkers to assist to record their personal narratives of their flight from their countries of origin to help them see if they fell within the international definition of a refugee, as UNHCR identifies refugees for international society to protect. This was heady and interesting work and one often felt like one was doing good work, when the going was good. It felt like we were saving the world, one refugee applicant at a time.

Cons

There are many downsides to working with UNHCR but for a long while it was countermanded by the sheer exhilaration of our work that saved refugees. Here are the cons. The list is not exhaustive. a) the revolving door of international managers, heads of units, and head of office that appear like clockwork. Each new supervisor fresh off the boat wants to place their stamp on the office by changing what isn't broken, by modifying SOPs, by modifying workflows to what suits them, by picking and choosing which refugee policies they want to follow or discard, and by relying too heavily on politics and ignoring the importance of IHL and IRL in the determination of refugee status. Refugees and asylum-seekers thus get sacrificed regularly on the altar of this revolving door of international managers. 2) the local staff who allow themselves to get sidetracked by incompetent and political managers for the sake of some scraps from the career pile. They sell out the refugee protection mandate when they do not insist that the revolving door of managers respect and abide by the refugee protection mandate even when it is not politicallly expedient to do so. 3) Managers who feel that all staff below them are beneath them and should be mere yes-men. 4) People who seek promotion by backstabbing peers and colleagues. 5) Representatives who play favourites and turn a blind eye to megalomaniacal middle management colleagues in their midst. 6) Representatives who are themselves megalomaniacs. 7) Incompetent managers who hide their incompetence by being nasty to colleagues. Forcing out colleagues they dislike or are threatened by, through a series of SOP changes and constant amendments to team workflow and workloads. Refusing to approve annual leave the whole year and then forcing staff to burn their excess annual leave which can no longer be carried over, then getting vindictive when HR allows the staff member to clear their leave. 8) Accusing all and sundry of fraud and misconduct just because they do not understand the established forms and practices set in place by the RSD SOPs which they have failed to read and digest before criticizing staff. Getting upset because they do not know how to use proGres software and thinking everyone is just like them. 9) Forgetting that caseworkers are hired to do casework and not to be their clerical and admin assistants. There is a team for that. 10) This list is not exhaustive but I will stop here.

2.0
Feb 9, 2019

Good mandate ruined by poor leadership

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The mandate , the ability to work closely with persons of concern, and some good mid-level technical people.

Cons

The worst leadership I have witnessed in 25 yrs. Internal recruitments, nepotism is rife, diversity at HQ is a question mark, senior managers are people who have never worked anywhere else and therefore have developed a horrible arrogant attitude towards all other stakeholders and believe they know best but havent kept abreast with any changes outside the agency. Many of them are horribly incompetent with serious bouts of 'savior complex'. Leadership is focused on their own branding and external communications. Technical areas suffer as have to report to incompetent managers. Dont work at HQ, go to the operations (after you have checked who your manager will be).

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Glassdoor has 1,319 UNHCR reviews submitted anonymously by UNHCR employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if UNHCR is right for you.