UNICEF is the world’s leading source of data on children used by over 3 million people globally. We believe that smart demand, supply and use of data drives better results for children.
Malnutrition is a violation of children’s rights, while good nutrition sets children on the path to grow, develop, learn and reach their full potential. Despite significant progress over the past two decades, the UNICEF, WHO, World Bank global and regional child malnutrition estimates reveal that we are still far from a world without malnutrition. Measures of child malnutrition are used to ...
What is UNICEF doing to make our data open? UNICEF’s Helix project, initiated by a catalytic fund from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, has implemented public, web-based open data services that share our global public indicators on the state of children and women.
UNICEF’s Supply operation is always on standby, ready to get lifesaving medicines, vaccines, therapeutic food, hygiene kits and other essential items to children and families in need quickly and ...
Those little orange boxes have come a long way since the first kids Trick-or-Treated for UNICEF back in 1950. Today’s Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF program, which is one of the global nonprofit’s most ...
Arlo Parks, UNICEF UK High Profile Supporter, said: "I feel so proud to be involved with UNICEF UK and continue my journey with them as a High Profile Supporter. It was a privilege to visit the Rights ...
FoodNavigator-USA: As food brands tweak child marketing rules, UNICEF’s playbook still holds
As governments and companies respond to growing scrutiny of how unhealthy foods are advertised to kids, UNICEF’s 2023 toolkit reads less like dated guidance and more like a roadmap the system is still ...