15 February 2020

COVID-19

To stay prepared and protect yourself and your loved ones, it is important to know the facts. Be sure to get your facts from reliable sources, like UNICEF,the World Health Organization, and government agencies UNICEF is working with experts around the clock to provide accurate information. Information you can trust is grounded in the latest…, Latest updates, Read the latest news, information and features on COVID-19., Protective measures against COVID-19, Most people who become infected experience mild illness and recover, but it can be more severe for others. Take care of your health and protect others by doing the following: Go back to top, Must-reads for parents, caregivers and teachers, UNICEF is here to be your partner in navigating this health crisis by providing you with accurate and reliable information on the ways to keep you and others safe. Here are some of things you can do to manage the challenges that COVID-19 has brought: Go back to top, Must-reads for young people, For young people feeling anxious, isolated and disappointed, know this: you are not alone. Here’s what you can do to look after yourself and your mental health: Go back to top, Media resources, UNICEF’s media team is working around the clock to provide the latest information on the COVID-19 response through press releases, statements, multimedia and other resources for journalists. Go back to top, Must-reads for employers, Recommendations for employers to mitigate the negative consequences stemming from COVID-19.
21 May 2019

Guidelines for journalists

Reporting on children and young people has its special challenges. In some instances the act of reporting on children places them or other children at risk of retribution or stigmatization. UNICEF has developed these principles to assist journalists as they report on issues affecting children. They are offered as guidelines that UNICEF believes…, Principles, The dignity and rights of every child are to be respected in every circumstance. In interviewing and reporting on children, special attention is to be paid to each child's right to privacy and confidentiality, to have their opinions heard, to participate in decisions affecting them and to be protected from harm and retribution, including the…, Guidelines for interviewing children, Do no harm to any child; avoid questions, attitudes or comments that are judgmental, insensitive to cultural values, that place a child in danger or expose a child to humiliation, or that reactivate a child's pain and grief from traumatic events. Do not discriminate in choosing children to interview because of sex, race, age, religion, status,…, Guidelines for reporting on children, Do not further stigmatize any child; avoid categorisations or descriptions that expose a child to negative reprisals - including additional physical or psychological harm, or lifelong abuse, discrimination or rejection by their local communities. Always provide an accurate context for the child's story or image. Always change the name and obscure…, 'Best interests of the child', The question of whether or how to protect a subject's identity is an editorial judgment that must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis. In all cases, though, it should be based on the primacy of the ‘best interests of the child.' This standard is the foundation of many national laws governing child protection and an over-arching principle of the…, Why identity protection is needed, The need for greater identity protection for some children became increasingly evident in international reporting during the 1990s. There were two main reasons for this: first, a rise in the number of conflicts that targeted civilians, including children; and second, a heightened awareness of the full range of children's rights and their violation…, When to protect identities, "We have witnessed many instances where children have been further endangered or stigmatized after their stories are published,” notes UNICEF's Chief of Child Protection, Susan Bissell. “Protecting against this requires that reporting on children in high-risk situations also respects their individual rights to privacy, to participate in decisions…, Imagery that protects children, To address the challenge of protecting the visual identities of children at risk, UNICEF works with professional photographers and videographers who have demonstrated a key point: Imagery that fully protects the subject's identity can be as powerful and convincing as any other approach to documenting abuses. Creating such imagery often means…, When identities are revealed, The principle of a child's best interests also recognizes instances where risks are weighed and found to be in favour of publishing identities. This is the case with child advocates who choose to take a public stance on a potentially high-risk subject. Some former child soldiers, for example, testify openly to the brutality of their past…, Non-sensational coverage of child soldiers, A parallel dynamic is at work in documenting the issue of child soldiers. Media reports exposing the use of child combatants make a vital contribution to greater awareness of this gross exploitation and the global campaign to stop it. But to ensure that individual children are shielded against possible reprisals, stigma or worse, UNICEF protects…, Use of UNICEF materials, All of UNICEF materials are protected by copyright, including text, photographs, images and videotapes. Permission to reproduce any UNICEF material must be requested from the originating UNICEF office, and will be only be granted on the condition that the principles and guidelines in this document are adhered to. Sources: The Convention on the…