Nemzetközi tanulmányok
Az UNICEF munkájának alapja és programjainak célja a gyermekek jogainak biztosítása a világon mindenütt, minden gyermek számára. Rendszeresen jelentet meg tanulmányokat, elemzéseket a gyermekjogok érvényesüléséről.
Az UNICEF munkájának alapja és programjainak célja a gyermekek jogainak biztosítása a világon mindenütt, minden gyermek számára. Rendszeresen jelentet meg tanulmányokat, elemzéseket a gyermekjogok érvényesüléséről.
This report sets out the latest internationally comparable data on child deprivation and relative child poverty. Taken together, these two different measures offer the best currently available picture of child poverty across the world’s wealthiest nations.
Letöltés
Whether in health, in education, or in material well-being, some children will always fall behind the average. The critical question is – how far behind? Is there a point beyond which falling behind is not inevitable but policy susceptible, not unavoidable but unacceptable, not inequality but inequity?
Letöltés
This study, Child Trafficking in the Nordic Countries: Rethinking strategies and national responses, was initiated with twin aims: improving understanding of child trafficking and responses in the region; and contributing to the international discourse on child trafficking by examining the linkages between anti-trafficking responses and child protection systems.
Letöltés
Following one of the worst droughts in recent memory, the Horn of Africa ended 2011 with marked improvements in a number of conditions underpinning the regional humanitarian crisis. The chronic and often acute vulnerability of these affected communities highlights the need for a sustained humanitarian response in 2012 which places resilience building and disaster risk reduction approaches at its center.

Over the past twenty years the Internet has become an integral part of our lives. We have eagerly embraced its potential for communication, entertainment and information seeking . For many of today's children, the Internet, mobile phones and other technologies are a constant and familiar presence. For them, the distinction between online and offl ine has increasingly become meaningless, and they move seamlessly between both environments.

The experience of childhood is increasingly urban. Over half the world's people – including more than a billion children – now live in cities and towns. Many children enjoy the advantages of urban life, including access to educational, medical and recreational facilities.

This report sheds light on an issue, which is often kept in darkness – children who come into conflict with the law. It reveals that the juvenile justice systems in many parts of Eastern Europe and Central Asia are not serving children or society well, and in many instances cannot fairly claim to be delivering justice.

Long before there was a UNICEF, faith communities were among the greatest advocates for the world's neediest children, providing guidance, aid and comfort to millions of disadvantaged families.
OTP 11705008-29913358-00000000