2. GROUP MEMBERS
MUHAMMAD UMAR IQBAL 18-ARID-6215
JAVERIA HAMEED ABBASSI 18-ARID-6193
MOMINA BIBI 18-ARID6207
KASHIF MEHMOOD 18-ARID-6195
BUSHRA FIRDOUS 18-ARID-6182
AMNA IJAZ 18-ARID-6172
ALEENA SIKANDAR 18-ARID-6171
NAIMA HAMID 18-ARID-6221
SAMIA KALSOOM 18-ARID-6203
NIGHAT MUSHTAQ 18-ARID-6224
3. December 11,1946; (69 yearsago)
Fund
Active
New YorkCity
United Nations Economic and Social Council
www.unicef.org
4. UNICEF is a leading humanitarian and development agency working
globally for the rights of every child. Child rights begin with safe shelter,
nutrition, protection from disaster and conflict and traverse the life cycle:
pre-natal care for healthy births, clean water and sanitation, health care and
education.
UNICEF has spent nearly 70 years working to improve the lives of children
and their families. Working with and for children through adolescence and
into adulthood requires a global presence whose goal is to produce results
and monitor their effects. UNICEF also lobbies and partners with leaders,
thinkers and policy makers to help all children realize their rights—
especially the most disadvantaged.
5. UNICEF was established on 11 December 1946 by the United Nations to
meet the emergency needs of children in post-war Europe and China. Its
full name was the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund.
In 1950, its mandate was broadened to address the long-term needs of children and
women in developing countries everywhere. UNICEF became a permanent part of
the United Nations system in 1953, when its name was shortened to the United
Nations Children's Fund. However, UNICEF retained its original acronym.
6. UNICEFbecomespermanent
part of the UNFoodTo Europe
Education Nobel PeacePrize Child Survival and
Development Revolution
Convention on the Rights
of theChild
World Summit
for Children Children and conflict
United Nations Security Council debates
children and conflict
SayYesfor Children campaign launched
17. • UNICEF is supported by voluntary funds. Governments
contribute two thirds of the resources; private groups and some
6 million individual donors contribute the rest through National
Committees.
• Country office carries out UNICEF‘s mission through a unique
programme of cooperation developed with the host government.
• Regional offices guide the work and provide technical
assistance to country offices as needed.
• Overall management and administration takes place at
headquarters.
18. • Specialized offices include the Supply Division, based in
Copenhagen, which provides essential items as the
majority of life-saving vaccine doses for children in
developing countries.
• It operates the Innocenti Research Center in Florence
• Offices for Japan and Brussels, which assist with fund-
raising and liaison with policy makers.
• 36-member Executive
Board:
19.
20. With its strong presence in 190 countries, UNICEF is the world's leading advocate for children. The heart of
UNICEF's work is in the field.
Each country office carries out UNICEF's mission through a unique programme of cooperation developed with the
host government. This five- year programme focuses on practical ways to realize the rights of children and
women. Their needs are analyzed in a situation report produced at the beginning of the programme cycle.
21.
22. •Provide long term humanitarian and development assistances to
children &mothers in developing countries.
•Emphasize developing community level services to promote
health & wellbeing of children.
ORGANISATION
•In 191 countries through country programs & national committees.
•Guided by 36 member executive board.
•Head – executive director.
•Income- contribution by diff govts & private donors
23. • UNICEF Work
UNICEF works in 190 countries and territories to protect the rights of every child.
UNICEF has spent 70 years working to improve the lives of children and their families.
• UNICEF believes
All children have a right to survive, thrive and fulfill their potential – to the benefit of a
better world.
• UNICEF results
UNICEF works day-in day-out in the world’s toughest places to reach the most
vulnerable and disadvantaged children. Delivering results for children and young
people is our driving force.
• How UNICEF work
UNICEF works with the United Nations and its agencies to make sure that child are
on the global agenda. UNICEF strikes a balance between thorough research and
practical solutions for children.
29. Children and women are the most affected by
humanitarian situations
UNICEF is on the ground before, during and after
emergencies.
The Convention on the Rights of the Child and its
optional protocols guide UNICEF’s work on child
protection and children in armed conflict.
Humanitarian action is central to UNICEF’s
equity refocus.
UNICEF supports countries to respond to over 250
humanitarian situations per year on average
33. Health
Nutrition
low cost protein rich food
With FAO, aided Applied Nutrition Programme
Enriched food in endemic areas of nutritional def.
In collaboration with WHO, FAO, UNDP, & UNESCO
More attention on health aspects of mother & child
Eradicate TB, malaria , venereal disease – with WHO
Recently, idea of “Whole child” .
Country health programme
34. To encourage strategies for
child health revolution
Growth charts to monitor child
development
Oral rehydration
Breast feeding
Immunisation
35. • Pakistan was the sixth country in the world to sign and ratify the Convention on
the Rights of the Child, less than one year after it was adopted by the United
Nations General Assembly in 1989.
However, children and adolescents living in Pakistan still face acute
challenges.
• UNICEF supports the Government of Pakistan to accelerate progress for children,
work to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and help children
realize their rights under the Convention on the Rights of Children. This will be
made through, among others things, strong partnerships with provincial
authorities, teachers and health professionals, frontline workers and social
mobilisers, communities and families, and of course the children and adolescents
themselves.
36. In particular, UNICEF will work so that:
• Every child survives and thrives -- being in good health, immunized,
protected from polio and accessing nutritious food.
• Every child learns.
• Every child is protected from violence and exploitation, and
registered at birth.
• Every child lives in a safe and clean environment, with access to safe
drinking water and adequate sanitation
37. UNICE
F
COPENHAGEN SUPPLY DIVISIONCOPENHAGEN SUPPLY DIVISION
PANAMA SUPPLY HUBPANAMA SUPPLY HUB
UNICEF NYHQ
•Office of Emergency Programmes
•Emergency Response Team
•Global Support for Programme Areas
•Global Cluster Support
UNICEF GENEVA
• Partnerships with other UN agencies
• Fundraising
UNICEF GENEVA
•Partnerships with other UN agencies
•Fundraising
•Global Cluster Support
Regional Offices (7 locations)
- Guidance and direct support
DUBAI SUPPLY HUBDUBAI SUPPLY HUB
SHANGHAI SUPPLY HUBSHANGHAI SUPPLY HUB
County Offices
• Emergency Response
Plan
• Stockpiling supplies
County Offices
•Emergency Response Plan
•Stockpiling supplies
•Working with partners
38. Community empowerment, strengthening social service delivery and capacity
development
• Brazil, Ethiopia, Kenya, Niger, Pakistan and Zimbabwe
Risk-informed programming, including disaster risk reduction and situation analysis
Focus on education in 13 countries
39. UNICEF works with governments and
partners to support preparedness, in
addition to response, recovery and risk
reduction.
Target of our efforts:
•Strengthening the preparedness capacity of
national systems and communities (based on
analysis of the threats facing children)
•Internally, supporting UNICEF staff at all levels
•Externally, supporting partners through cluster
leadership
40. UNICEF works with governments and
partners to support preparedness, in
addition to response, recovery and risk
reduction.
Tools of the trade:
•Early warning/risk monitoring
•Standard operating procedures for response
•Contingency planning
•Emergency training
•Drills and simulations
41. In response to the mega-emergencies of,
UNICEF took bold steps:
•Human Resources (HR) in emergencies
unit established and HR fast track adopted,
which improved surge deployment
•Level 2 & 3 Simplified Standard Operating
Procedures (SSOP) finalized, which led to a
more predictable and efficient response
•Resources invested in strengthening
monitoring for results in humanitarian
action (e.g. Mali, Syria, etc.)
42.
43. Guided by Nelson Mandela’s vision that education can transform lives and help advance
society, Schools for Africa was founded in 2004 by the Nelson Mandela Foundation, the
Hamburg Society (now the Peter Krämer Stiftung) and UNICEF.
The critical campaign promotes quality education for all across 13 African
countries.
44. Want bea
President
Dreams to become
a teacher
Cango to school
despite his
disability
Hasachance to
avoid early
marriage
To date, Schools for Africa has helped more than 30 million
children achieve the dream of an education.
45. A children’s crisis: Of the 9.3 million
people affected by the crisis in Syria,
nearly half are children.
Major Challenges to Response:
•Attacks against humanitarian workers
•Intensive armed conflict and presence of
extremist groups hampering aid delivery
•Limited partner movements and
humanitarian access
•Protection of civilians, in particular
children
46. •1.1 million children vaccinated
•10 million people provided with accessto safe
drinking water
•400,000 children provided with remedial classes,
psychosocial support and recreational activities
•1.3 million people reached with combination
of accessto drinking and domesticwater,
immunization against measles,learning
programmes and access to psychosocial
support
47. 18
Country Funding Gap
Afghanistan 9%
CAR 65%
DRC 44%
DPRK 50%
Mali (+Burkina Faso,
Mauritania, Niger,
WCARO)
62%
Pakistan 29%
South Sudan 56%
Sudan 49%
Syria (+Lebanon,
Jordan, Iraq,
Turkey, Egypt)
21%
Yemen 48%
49. Digital marketing strategy
• Encouraging public support, participation and action (donations)
• Ensuring greater transparency and accountability
• Increasing and sustaining relationship-building and brand
awareness
50. Digital marketing strategy
• Encouraging public support, participation and action
(donations)
• Ensuring greater transparency and accountability
• Increasing and sustaining relationship-building and brand
awareness
51. General information: History
• Website (and seperate Online Shop)
• Display advertising (Banner,
Images, Videos)
• Social Media
• Blogs
• Podcasts
• Open data portal (Statistics)
• E-mail Marketing (Newsletter)
53. Further simplification
Helping to improve inter-agency responseto non-Level 3 emergencies
Apractical and inclusive humanitarian partnership system(regional and
South-South)
54. It is necessary an undergraduate course and several years of work experience to enter the
program of Volunteers of the United Nations programme.
This is a United Nations common programme, which recruits volunteers for assignments
throughout the United Nations system, including UNICEF. Application procedures and information
are available at the UNV Web site.
UNICEF does not recruit volunteers directly. Volunteer opportunities are offered
through the U.S. Fund for UNICEF in the case of US-based volunteer work. Similarly, UNICEF
National Committees in other industrialized countries can provide information on volunteer
activities for their respective citizens.
55. was UNICEF's firstexecutive director
from January 1947
On 1May 2010, Anthony Lake became the
sixth Executive Director of UNICEF,
bringing to the position more than 45 years
of public service.
•Henry R. Labouisse (1904 -1987)
•James P. Grant (1922 - 1995)
•Carol Bellamy (1995 –2005)
•Ann M. Veneman (1May2005)
56.
57. UNICEF was established for humanitarian and
developmental assistance to children and mothers
Recommendation:
•Enhance partnership with research and policy in the regional level
•Strengthen the staff implementation
•Look around all criticism
•Create more fundraising activities