THE SERIES

Innocenti Digest
The Innocenti Digests provide clear summaries of current knowledge and debate on specific child rights issues. They are written in an accessible style for use by a wide range of audiences, including policy makers, researchers, UNICEF staff, journalists and members of the public. Each Digest includes a Links Section, guiding the reader to relevant organizations and information sources.


Innocenti Insight
Insights take an intensive, and sometimes personal look at a specific child rights issue, giving the author or authors the chance to expand a detailed point of view or argument. Insights examine emerging, complex and sometime controversial issues that have a direct bearing on the implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child.


Innocenti Publications
Innocenti Publications focus on the Centre itself and are promotional publications describing what the Centre does and how it does it. This series includes the Centre's Annual Review, its Publications Catalogue, advocacy leaflets and others, including some data and documentation arising from various projects.


Innocenti Report Cards
In keeping with UNICEF's mandate to advocate for children in every country, the Centre's Report Card series focuses on the well-being of children in industrialized countries. Each Report Card includes a league table ranking the countries of the OECD according to their record on the subject under discussion. Topics covered have included child poverty and child deaths resulting from injuries. The Report Cards are published every six months and are carefully designed to appeal to a wide audience while maintaining academic rigour.


Innocenti Working Papers
The Working Papers are the foundation of the Centre's research output, underpinning many of the Centre's other publications. These high quality research papers are aimed at an academic and well-informed audience, contributing to ongoing discussion on a wide range of child-related issues. More than 80 Working Papers have been published to date, with recent Papers covering such diverse issues as the dynamics of child poverty in the countries of the OECD, the impact of child labour on education in Ghana and data from a survey of 100 villages in Indonesia. NB: The series Innocenti Occasional Papers, Economic and Social Policy (IOPs) has become Innocenti Working Papers as of no. 72. The numbering is consecutive. Papers 63 onwards are also available for download. To view the list of all Innocenti Occasional Papers (with sub-series) click here click here.


Regional Monitoring Report
The Centre's MONEE Project has been monitoring the impact of the social and economic changes in Central and Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States since 1992, making a major contribution to the debate on public policies on children's issues in the region. The Project includes the Regional Monitoring Report, published annually in English and Russian. The Report covers every country in the region, providing authoritative statistics on the situation of children, backed by detailed analysis.


Innocenti Social Monitor
The Social Monitor is a new high-impact annual publication of the MONEE Project. Its function is to report on trends in the welfare of children, young people and women in the CEE/CIS/Baltics region, and to serve as a basis for advocacy and policy debate in the region. It partially replaces the Regional Monitoring Report series (eight of which were produced between 1993 and 2001), It is professionally published for a non-specialist audience, and widely distributed in both English and Russian versions to policymakers, international organisations, interest groups and the international media.


I.O.P. Economic Policy
The series Innocenti Occasional Papers, Economic and Social Policy (IOPs) has become Innocenti Working Papers as of no. 72. The numbering is consecutive. Papers 63 onwards are also available for download.


Innocenti Discussion Papers
The Discussion Papers are signed pieces by researchers on current topics in social and economic policy. The findings, interpretations and conclusions expressed in this paper are entirely those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the policies or the views of the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).


Click here to search the catalogue.


Back     Top of the page     Forward