The State of the World Children 2025. Ending Child Poverty: Our Shared Imperative
2025
REF 050.2025
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Details
Title
The State of the World Children 2025. Ending Child Poverty: Our Shared Imperative
Imprint
Florence (Italy): UNICEF Innocenti - Global Office of Research and Foresight, 2025.
Language Note
English
French
Spanish
Arabic
French
Spanish
Arabic
Description
80 p.
ISBN/LRC Code
978-92-806-5704-3
Summary
In a world of plenty, too many children are suffering as poverty strips them of their rights and endangers their futures. Poverty is commonly understood as a lack of access to financial resources. Every day, 412 million children wake up in extreme monetary poverty, surviving on less than $3 per day. Children are more than twice as likely as adults to live in extreme monetary poverty. Because their bodies and minds are still developing, children are also more vulnerable to the effects of poverty, with potentially life-long consequences for their well-being. But monetary poverty tells only part of the story. Poverty also needs to be understood in terms of the deprivations children experience in their daily lives – in areas like housing, nutrition, clean water, sanitation, education, and healthcare. More than 1 in 5 children in low- and middle-income countries are severely deprived in at least two vital areas critical for their health, development and well-being. Sanitation is the most widespread severe deprivation, with 65 per cent of children lacking access to a toilet in low-income countries, 26 per cent in lower-middle income countries, and 11 per cent in upper-middle income countries. For children, poverty undermines their health and development, limits their ability to learn, and leads to weaker job prospects, shorter lives, and higher rates of depression and anxiety.
Note
Electronic ed.
Call Number
REF 050.2025
Linked Resources
Language
English
System Control No.
MON-131222
Primary Descriptors
Secondary Descriptors