• High contrast
  • |
  • A
  • A+
  • A++
Skip to main content
Logo UNICEF Innocenti
Office of Research-Innocenti
Logo UNICEF Innocenti
Office of Research-Innocenti
Logo UNICEF Innocenti
Office of Research-Innocenti
SUBSCRIBE
menu icon
  • ABOUT UNICEF INNOCENTI
    • How we work
    • History of Innocenti
    • Our staff
    • Alumni
    • Employment opportunities
    • Contact us
    • FAQs
  • NEWS & MULTIMEDIA
    • News articles
    • Evidence for Action Blog
    • Video
    • Podcasts
    • Campaigns & microsites
    • Research Watch
    • Presentations
    • Press Centre
  • High contrast
  • |
  • A
  • A+
  • A++
  • RESEARCH
    • Child labour
      • Child labour
      • Child labour and education in India and Bangladesh
      • Child labour and social protection in Africa
    • Children & migration
    • Children in high-income countries
      • Children in high-income countries
      • Innocenti Report Card
    • COVID-19 & Children
      • COVID-19 & Children
      • Children and COVID-19 Research Libary
    • Digital Engagement and Protection
      • Digital Engagement and Protection
      • Global Kids Online
      • Disrupting Harm
    • Education
      • Education
      • Data Must Speak
      • Digital Learning
      • Early Childhood Education
      • Inclusive Education for Children with Disabilities
      • Let Us Learn
      • Sport for Development
      • Teachers for All
      • Time to Teach
      • Women in Learning Leadership
    • Gender Equality
    • Gender-responsive & age-sensitive social protection
    • Harmful Practices
    • Humanitarian research
    • Mental Health
    • Child poverty
    • Social protection & cash transfers
      • Social protection & cash transfers
      • Social protection in humanitarian settings
      • Cash Plus
    • Violence against children
    • Research experts
    • Research archive
  • PUBLICATIONS
    • Annual Reports
    • Best of UNICEF Research
    • Discussion Papers
    • Journal articles
    • Policy Briefs
    • Report Card
    • Research Briefs
    • Research Reports
    • Working Papers
    • Miscellanea
  • RESEARCH FACILITATION
    • Applied Behavioural Science
    • Ethical research for children
    • Evidence synthesis
      • Evidence synthesis
      • Evidence Gap Maps
      • Methodological briefs on evidence synthesis
    • Capacity building
    • Research uptake and impact
  • EVENTS & CONVENING
  • SEARCH
  • ABOUT UNICEF INNOCENTI
    • How we work
    • History of Innocenti
    • Our staff
    • Alumni
    • Employment opportunities
    • Contact us
    • FAQs
  • NEWS & MULTIMEDIA
    • News articles
    • Evidence for Action Blog
    • Video
    • Podcasts
    • Campaigns & microsites
    • Research Watch
    • Presentations
    • Press Centre
menu iconClose menu

Publications

UNICEF Innocenti's complete catalogue of research and reports
How Gender-responsive Age-sensitive Social Protection is Related to the Climate Crisis: A summary of the evidence
SPOTLIGHT

How Gender-responsive Age-sensitive Social Protection is Related to the Climate Crisis: A summary of the evidence

This paper outlines how climate change can create specific gendered risks based on age and stage of the life course.
READ THE FULL REPORT

RESULTS:   0     SORT BY:

Reset publication filters

FILTER BY:

SKIP THE FILTER
INNOCENTI DISCUSSION PAPERS INNOCENTI REPORT CARD INNOCENTI RESEARCH BRIEFS INNOCENTI WORKING PAPERS MISCELLANEA INNOCENTI RESEARCH REPORT BEST OF UNICEF RESEARCH
JOURNAL ARTICLES BLOG
3 smiling girls hold tablets containing the Accessible Digital Textbook.
Article

Innovating for Inclusion: Testing Uruguay’s first Accessible Digital Textbook for children with and without disabilities

Children with disabilities are 49 per cent more likely to have never attended school compared to children without disabilities. Even when in school, children with disabilities still face unique and additional barriers to learning, including limited access to appropriate and accessible teaching and learning materials. New and innovative technologies can be catalytic to advance inclusion in education to ensure ALL children can access, participate and learn in school. The UNICEF-led Accessible Digital Textbooks (ADT) initiative, in collaboration with Ministries of Education and implementing partners, follows Universal Design of Learning (UDL) principles to design and produce accessible digital textbooks (ADTs) for children with and without disabilities, to ensure that all students can learn together. ADTs have accessibility features such as sign language videos, navigation support, voice over and image descriptions, subtitles and interactive UDL activities.
Read the article
This young (COVID) life
Article

This young (COVID) life

This project explores children and young people’s experiences, opinions, and reactions to the COVID-19 pandemic and related government responses. The pandemic brought changes to their daily lives, social spaces, relationships, and inner worlds. The research sheds light on life since the beginning of the pandemic and how it has affected children and adolescents. It provides ideas and recommendations on managing similar crises in the future. The project has collected the words, drawings, and photos of more than 1,000 children across 6 different countries between 2021 and 2023.
Read the article
Inclusion Matters: Inclusive Interventions for Children with Disabilities – An evidence and gap map from low- and middle-income countries
Publication

Inclusion Matters: Inclusive Interventions for Children with Disabilities – An evidence and gap map from low- and middle-income countries

In this publication we report our Evidence and Gap Mapping (EGM) of “Inclusive Interventions for Children with Disabilities in LMICs”. It shows that research is lacking in many critical areas: awareness and non-discrimination, protection, adequate standard of living, family and community life, and empowerment – that represent critical areas of policy and programming in need of robust evidence to improve inclusion and participation. Specific areas overlooked include tackling harmful stereotypes, tackling abuse and violence and ways to reduce stigma; on improving accessibility to water, sanitation, hygiene, housing and food; and interventions that aim for children with disabilities to enjoy their right to be heard, to play and to have their views considered in all matters affecting them. Health research covers 3 in 4 of all studies in our EGM, but there is little evidence on improving access to general health services and accessibility for children with disabilities in healthcare settings. Inclusive education was moderately represented, but lacked the detail to understand how it was implemented or if inclusive education was effective in improving (or harming) academic outcomes, school readiness, graduation rates or the quality of educational services. The companion protocol for the EGM can be found at this link Please also see our EGM on Child and Adolescent Mental Health and Psychosocial Support Interventions
Read the publication
30 Years of Research on Migration and Displacement at UNICEF Innocenti
Article

30 Years of Research on Migration and Displacement at UNICEF Innocenti

As global displacement rises, there is a pressing need to understand and respond to the migration experiences of children. This article provides key insights from a comprehensive review of UNICEF Innocenti’s research on migration and displacement over the last 30 years.
Read the article
A series of artworks produced by children to describe their environments is displayed as cards
Article

Children's Views about their Environments

A collection of artworks created by children and young people from Australia, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, Costa Rica, Italy, and New Zealand on key environmental issues highlighted in the Innocenti Report Card 17 'Places and Spaces: Environments and children's well-being'. In each country participating in this project, small groups of children and adolescents discussed how global environmental challenges affect their daily lives. Based on their discussions, children engaged in creative activities: they made videos, drew or wrote stories, took photos, and wrote or recorded audio captions for their artwork.
Read the article

Share:

SHARE
facebook twitter linkedin google+ reddit print email
  • CHILD RIGHTS AND PROTECTION
    • Children & migration
    • Child labour
    • Child rights in the digital age
    • Gender Equality
    • Gender-responsive & age-sensitive social protection
    • Violence against children
  • EDUCATION
    • COVID-19 & Education
    • Data Must Speak
    • Digital Learning
    • Early Childhood Education
    • Learning is For Everyone (LiFE)
    • Let Us Learn
    • Sport for Development (S4D)
    • Teachers For All (T4A)
    • Time To Teach
    • Women in Learning Leadership (WiLL)
  • SOCIAL AND ECONOMICS POLICY
    • Children in high income countries
    • Child labour and social protection in Africa
    • Social protection in humanitarian settings
    • Multidimensional child poverty
    • Social protection and cash transfers
  • RESEARCH FACILITATION
    • Applied Behavioural Science
    • Ethical research for children
    • Evidence synthesis
    • Evidence Gap Maps
    • Capacity building
    • Research uptake and impact
  • COVID-19 AND CHILDREN
    • COVID-19 Rapid Research Response
    • Children and COVID-19 Research Library
  • PUBLICATIONS
    • Discussion Papers
    • Report Card
    • Research Briefs
    • Policy Briefs
    • Research Reports
    • Working Papers
    • Best of UNICEF Research
    • Miscellanea
    • Other publication series
    • Journal articles
  • NEWS & MULTIMEDIA
    • News articles
    • Evidence for Action Blog
    • Video
    • Podcasts
    • Campaigns & microsites
    • Research Watch
    • Presentations
  • EVENTS & CONVENING
    • Thought leadership
    • Leading Minds Conference
    • Webinars
    • World Children's Day
  • ABOUT UNICEF INNOCENTI
    • How we work
    • History of Innocenti
    • Our staff
    • Alumni
    • Employment opportunities
    • Contact us
    • FAQs

Become an Innocenti Insider

Receive the latest research and event invites in your inbox once a month.

X
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • instagram
  • youtube
  • soundcloud
Legal | Contact us
Skip to top