(UNICEF)
United Nations Children's Fund
an affiliated agency of the United Nations. It was established in 1946
as the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund. UNICEF
is concerned with assisting children and adolescents throughout the
world, particularly in devastated areas and developing countries. Unlike
most United Nations agencies, UNICEF is financed through voluntary contributions
from governments and individuals, rather than by regular assessments.
National UNICEF committees collaborate with UNICEF in various projects.
UNICEF was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1965.
History of Organization
Established by the United Nations General Assembly on December 11, 1946
and originally known as the United Nations International Children's
Emergency Fund (UNICEF), the UN Children's Fund has employed three approaches
in discharging its mandate.
For the postwar period 1946 to 1950, the "emergency needs approach"
meant swift action to meet the food, clothing, and health needs of children,
particularly in Europe. At an expenditure of $112,000,000, UNICEF distributed
various articles of clothing to five million children in twelve countries,
vaccinated eight million against tuberculosis, rebuilt milk processing
and distribution facilities, and, at the climax of its effort in Europe,
provided a daily supplementary meal to millions of children.
During the period 1951-1960, UNICEF continued to meet emergency needs,
but at the same time moved into the long-range benefit approach. To
protect the health of children, UNICEF conducted campaigns against tuberculosis,
yaws, leprosy, and malaria; made provisions for environmental sanitation;
encouraged maternal and child health care education. To raise nutritional
standards for children, UNICEF helped countries produce and distribute
low-cost, high-protein foods and fostered programs to educate people
in their use. To provide for the social welfare of children, UNICEF
instituted informal training of mothers in child rearing and home improvement,
aided services for children through day-care and neighborhood centers,
family counseling, and youth clubs. The expenditures totalled $150,000,000.
UNICEF broadened its policy during the 1961-1970 period by adopting
a concept of allying aid for children to the development of the nation.
In recognition of the interconnection between aspects of national policy
and programs of aid to children, this approach, called the "country
approach," permitted UNICEF to implement in appropriate ways the priorities
established by each nation in meeting the needs of its children. Consequently,
becoming concerned with the intellectual, psychological, and vocational
needs of children as well as with their physical needs, UNICEF provided
assistance for teacher education and curriculum reform, allocated funds
for pre-vocational training in usable skills, promoted information on
the uses of technology. UNICEF projects, in short, reflected a comprehensive
view of the child, seeing him as "a future agent for economic and social
change." In this decade UNICEF's total expenditures were in excess of
$300,000,000.
In the decade of the seventies, UNICEF will attempt to elevate the quality
of life of children in the developing nations, coordinating its efforts
with those of the governments concerned. UNICEF hopes to increase its
assistance during the decade, aiming at an annual level of $100,000,000
by 1975, and to enlist complementary support from international, multinational,
and nongovernmental agencies.
Stark statistics for UNICEF's twenty-five-year history reveal only a
facet of the constructive work accomplished, but they provide some indication
of its scope: 71,000,000 children examined for trachoma and 43,000,000
treated; 425,000,000 examined for yaws and 23,000,000 treated; 400,000,000
vaccinated against tuberculosis, many millions protected from malaria,
and 415,000 discharged as cured of leprosy; 12,000 rural health centers
and several thousand maternity wards established in eighty-five countries;
help given to provide equipment for 2,500 teacher training schools,
56,000 primary and secondary schools, 965 pre-vocational training schools,
31 schools for training pre-vocational instructors, 600 for training
dietary personnel; equipment supplied for 4,000 nutrition centers and
community gardens, and for 9,000 school gardens and canteens; equipment
given to 2,500 day-care centers, 3,000 women's clubs, and 3,500 community
centers; supplementary meals dispensed in the billions and articles
of clothing in the high millions; emergency aid furnished to hundreds
of thousands victimized by floods, earthquakes, and other natural disasters.
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