News

Here are a few examples of UNICEF's poverty work around the world. Cushioning the devastating impacts of Lebanon's economic crisis with cash assistance.
Nearly 20% of adults from 14 countries believe they won’t be able to have as many kids as they want, new research found.
UNICEF is proud to have a community of Youth Advocates representing many countries from around the world. As members of UNICEF USA’s National Youth Council, we voice the concerns of youth in the ...
The artist’s works are installed in some of the most iconic public spaces around the world, from the Vatican to the United ...
Global measles cases increased by 48.1% between 2017 and 2018, according to calculations by UNICEF of data on 194 countries from the World Health Organization. Ten countries, including Brazil, the ...
The Event: The 9th annual UNICEF Hope Gala drew nearly 600 supporters into a wondrous world at the Geraghty in Chicago on April 9. Evoking an Alice’s dreamlike Wonderland with giant flowers ...
A new report from UNICEF finds that there's been a lot of progress in the last 5 years when it comes to tackling child labor in many parts of the world. But sub-Saharan Africa has made less progress.
Afrooz Kaviani Johnson, UNICEF child protection specialist, tells U.S. News that when researchers gathered national statistics from 120 countries and territories around the world for 2010-22, the ...
UN International Children’s Emergency Fund (), a UN agency responsible for providing humanitarian and developmental aid to children worldwide, released a report Friday on International Women’s Day ...
The United Nations estimates that around 140 million children worldwide have no home. Not all of them have had to mourn the loss of their father and mother due to war, epidemics or hunger.
People around the world lost confidence in the importance of childhood vaccines against diseases like measles and polio during the Covid pandemic, according to a report from UNICEF.
Global measles cases increased by 48.4% between 2017 and 2018, according to calculations by UNICEF of data on 194 countries from the World Health Organization.