A UNICEF club is a student-led grassroots club present at high school and college levels of education, formed for the purpose of promoting the values of the parent organization the United Nations Children's Fund or UNICEF. The stated goal of the club is to "to empower youth [...] with the resources and skills to be effective global citizens" and "to support the world's most vulnerable children" through advocacy, education, community building, and fundraising.[P 1]: 3
These can be created as their own independent club or as a group within a larger club, as long as separate leaders are appointed for it. Once created, board members are expected to host activities which help advocate or fundraise for UNICEF-related causes, such as "Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF", the "UNICEF Tap Project", or other humanitarian work.
Since the clubs first began to be made in 1952, they have received mostly positive reception from the press for their work, with some exceptions. Clubs today can be found at major universities in the United States, including Yale and Duke University, but are also present internationally in other countries such as Canada and Hong Kong.
History
The first UNICEF club was created in 1952,[a] shortly after the founding of the United Nations in 1946. Little guidelines were implemented for clubs in the beginning: allowing for their creation in middle schools among other things.[1] Early causes, such as funding UNICEF-assisted feeding programs,[1] were accomplished through more modest fundraising methods: including running errands, raking leaves, selling comic books, etc.[1] More effective advocacy and fundraising methods were developed later through time.[b]
As more clubs began to be established, multiple events have garnered both positive and negative coverage from the press. In 2015, Illinois senator Mark Kirk helped create the UNICEF club at New Trier High School, in which he was an alma mater, to increase awareness of current social issues and to "help and give back", according to Kirk.[2]
During the COVID-19 pandemic, UNICEF clubs either worked virtually[3] or were forced to suspended their operations during the pandemic lockdowns.[4] For the clubs that decided to work virtually, online fundraising events were used to help support UNICEF COVID-19 relief efforts.[5]
To create a UNICEF club, four leaders and one advisor are required as minimum leadership.[P 1]: 5 Advisors must be adults aged 25 years or older, and not a staff member for UNICEF.[P 1]: 5 Advisors must also perform a background check if not a teacher or high-school employee.[P 1]: 7 Once gathered, the club's registration application must be approved by UNICEF to become official.[P 1]: 5 Official clubs are expected to hold registered and approved events by UNICEF focused on advocacy, education, community building, and fundraising for children's rights.[P 1]: 5 Clubs are required to re-register and submit yearly funds at the start of each consecutive school year.[P 1]: 6 UNICEF clubs can also be made as a sub-group within a larger, like-minded club, as long as additional leaders are chosen specifically to work on UNICEF-related tasks.[P 2]
Leadership
There are six board member or leadership positions within the club, listed in the table below. Leaders of the club are required to commit to at least five hours per week, host board meetings at least once a week, and host member meetings at most biweekly.[P 3]: 2 Leadership terms are one school-year long before being reassigned.[P 3]: 2
Leadership positions/board members
Position
By whom
Responsibility
Ref.
President
Student
Organize and execute events, coordinate leadership transitions
In recent history, two annually-held activities present in many UNICEF clubs are the Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF and UNICEF Tap Project donation collections. Serving as the largest fundraising event for some clubs, Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF takes place on Halloween on 31 October, and is often executed by trick-or-treating for donations instead of candy.[3][7][8][9] The UNICEF Tap Project takes place during World Water Day on 22 March, and has been executed recently via UNICEF's Tap Project app: where 'for every 10 minutes you don't use your phone, a child is provided 1 day of clean water'.[10]