Read More about How UNICEF Helps Central American Child Migrants
A conversation with UNICEF Child Protection Specialist Lea Beaudry about how UNICEF is doing whatever it takes to protect kids.
UNICEF and partners are working to improve conditions in Honduras, so children and families won't feel forced to migrate.
Current policies prevent families from accessing their legal right to protection in the U.S. as they seek asylum.
Central Americans targeted by gangs face a difficult choice: leave everything behind and start over, or stay put and risk death.
Violence forces families and children to flee Honduras every day. UNICEF is working to make the country safer for all.
UNICEF is stationed on the routes migrant children travel to protect them — especially those who are on their own — and their rights.
FAQs: Here's how UNICEF and UNICEF USA are working to support and protect migrating children every step of the way.
Building on decades of experience around the world, UNICEF is standing up for the rights of children seeking sanctuary in the U.S.
A toddler dies on the border as reports of migrant children held in unsafe U.S. facilities spark demands for action to keep children safe.
Children are compelled to leave their homeland — but they would much rather stay. UNICEF helps make it possible.
After a special mission to meet migrant children in Mexico, UNICEF Next Generation got busy fundraising. And then the earthquakes hit.