Field Research Assistant
- Career Category: Research / Development, Assistant
- Schedule:Full-time
- Salary: $200 - $340
Duration: 30–40 hours over1–2weeks (full working days)
Start Date: As soon as possible.
Expenses: Travel and meals covered by LABRI within pre-approved limits
LABRI is seeking a short-term Field Research Assistant to support LABRI's scoping exercise in Cambodia. We are conducting exploratory research to understand how used lead-acid batteries are collected, traded, and processed in Cambodia—particularly in the informal sector. Your findings will inform our strategy for future work in Cambodia.
This is a field-based role. You will spend full days traveling to sites across major cities, talking to people, and piecing together how the battery trade works on the ground. LABRI will cover all travel and fieldwork expenses, within pre-approved limits.
The work suits someone who is comfortable walking into a scrap yard or repair shop and starting a conversation, asking the right follow-up questions, and notice things that don't quite add up.
- Visit junk shops, battery repair shops, scrap dealers, auto-electrical shops, retailers, and other relevant sites to observe and document how ULABs move through the supply chain.
- Talk to traders, shop owners, workers, and other actors to understand how batteries are collected, sold, dismantled, and processed.
- Record your findings clearly using LABRI's templates and discuss with LABRI’s Co-Executive Director, so the team can act on them without ambiguity.
- Khmer - Fluent
- English - Good
- You are reliable: you show up, you document carefully, and you flag when something doesn't make sense.
- You are fluent in at least one major local language relevant to Cambodia (e.g. Khmer). Working-level English is needed for reporting; strong local language skills matter more for the fieldwork.
- You are based in or able to travel to major cities in Cambodia.
- Direct familiarity with informal markets, waste trading, or scrap dealing in Cambodia—whether through professional experience, research, or lived knowledge.
- Experience in field research, community engagement, or investigative work that required building trust and gathering information in unstructured environments.
- You know how to talk to people across very different settings–a mechanic's workshop, a scrap yard, an NGO office–and get useful, honest information out of those conversations.
- You have good judgment about which information actually matters.