The Origins of UNICEF, 19461953
By (Author) Jennifer M. Morris
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
16th April 2015
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Child welfare and youth services
International institutions / intergovernmental organizations
History: specific events and topics
362.7
Hardback
182
Width 158mm, Height 238mm, Spine 19mm
413g
The Origins of UNICEF traces the history of the founding of the worlds most well-known and often controversial relief aid organization for children. UNICEF modeled itself after several national organizations as well as some of the early twentieth-century transnational and international relief aid organizations, catering to a clientele that many observers claimed would be impossible to resist or ignore. In only a few years, UNICEFs programs provided relief aid to millions of children in locations around the globe, but the atmosphere of post-war cooperation, quickly supplanted by Cold War tensions, caused UNICEFs efforts to be scrutinized lest they be too closely aligned with either the United States or the Soviet Bloc. UNICEF remains one of the most highly regarded and effective child relief-aid organizations in the world. The story of its founding and its first years as an aid organization provide insight into how an international, apolitical, philanthropic organization must maneuver through political and cultural tensions in order to achieve its goal of mitigating human suffering.
The goal of humanitarian organizations is obviously to relieve suffering, but their work is also shaped by politics and other ideological considerations. Morris chronicles the establishment and early years of the United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF) and the influence of the ideas and practices about aid to children and mothers inherited from its predecessor charities, the Commission for Relief in Belgium and Save the Children, as well as the emergence of the Cold War. The leadership of the first executive director, Maurice Pate; the roles of Dr. Martha Eliot and other personnel; interactions with related agencies, such as the Food and Agriculture Organization and the World Health Organization; and efforts to support US foreign policy in Europe to secure crucial funding are explored. After achieving success in the immediate postwar period with relief programs, including supplemental feeding, clothing distribution, and vaccinations and other medical care, UNICEF gained permanent status within the UN in 1953 and shifted its focus to international development programs geared to children while continuing to provide aid to them in regions affected by conflict. For 20th-century history and humanitarian studies collections. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. * CHOICE *
The Origins of UNICEF, 19461953is an important analysis of global organization in the Cold War era. In tracing UNICEFs evolution from temporary institution to permanent status, Morris shows us not just how international politics, and particularly US policy, influenced this organization, but how US and Western cultural concepts of the family were packaged with relief work. Morris book is a reminder that even the most seemingly apolitical gestures of philanthropy are laden with political and cultural meaning. -- Krista Sigler, University of Cincinnati Blue Ash College
Jennifer Morris takes us back to the origins of a relief organization dedicated to the noblest of causes: the health of children and their mothers.We seeinside UNICEF's creation afterWorld War II. Dr. Morris also hasgreat coverage ofthe organization's first director, Maurice Pate. It's important we know this historyas the struggle for the basic rights of nutrition and health for children andmothers continues to this day. -- William Lambers, expert on the UN and world hunger, and author of Ending World Hunger: School Lunches for Kids Around the World
Jennifer M. Morris is associate professor of European, world, and women's history at Mount St. Joseph University.