Child Refugee & Migrant Crisis
What would it take to leave your home behind? Central Americans heading North in search of safety share their stories in a new documentary.
Extreme levels of organized crime and gang violence are facts of life for many children growing up scared in Central America.
In Reynosa, Mexico, shelters offer a bed, clothes, food & medical care to migrants headed for the U.S. and others returning home, dejected.
Family separation and detention are bad for children. Please join UNICEF in speaking out to protect refugee and migrant children.
Pervasive violence and poverty drive Central Americans to seek safety elsewhere. UNICEF is working to improve conditions at home.
Driven from their homes by a brutal military crackdown, Rohingya refugee children use art to share their stories and dreams for the future.
Recovering from trauma, Rohingya refugee children in Bangladesh are getting a chance to just be kids again.
Fresh waves of violence in Syria's brutal civil war will place the lives of more than 1 million children at imminent risk.
Born as her family was fleeing civil war in Somalia, 20-year-old Hamdia Ahmed is determined to give back to those who are less fortunate.
One year ago, close to a million Rohingya fled violence in Myanmar for Bangladesh. Now a generation of children face uncertain futures.
Conditions threaten to worsen in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, now home to the largest refugee camp in the world.
When a young artist volunteers to work with newly arrived migrant children, they all find joy in the magic of art.