In its 2024 MENA gender equality reporting, UNICEF said more than 4.7 million children and youth accessed education opportunities through UNICEF-supported programs, with a strong focus on girls’ participation and skills development. That number matters because girls’ empowerment in the MENA region begins long before adulthood.
Key Takeaways
- UNICEF is the United Nations children’s agency, and its gender equality work is central to the future of girls in MENA.
- UNICEF supports girls through education, health, nutrition, protection from violence, menstrual health, skills, social protection, climate action, and humanitarian response.
- Girls in MENA may face barriers linked to mobility, school dropout, child marriage, unpaid care, malnutrition, violence, and limited participation.
- For women’s empowerment, UNICEF matters because the opportunities a woman has often begin with the rights, safety, and learning she had as a girl.
Why UNICEF Matters For Women’s Empowerment
UNICEF is known for child rights, but its work is also deeply connected to women’s empowerment. A girl who stays in school, avoids early marriage, receives health care, learns digital skills, understands her rights, and grows up protected from violence has a stronger chance of becoming a woman with choices.
In the Middle East and North Africa, UNICEF has emphasized that gender discrimination can affect children from the earliest stages of life and continue through adolescence. Girls and young women may face restrictions on mobility, unequal care burdens, barriers to the labor market, school dropout risks, early pregnancy, violence, exploitation, and harmful practices. These are not isolated issues. They shape the region’s future workforce, leadership, families, and communities.
What UNICEF Does For Girls In MENA
Girls’ Education And Learning
Education is one of the strongest predictors of future empowerment. UNICEF supports access to learning, school retention, skills development, and gender-responsive education systems. This is especially important for rural girls, displaced girls, girls affected by conflict, and adolescent girls at risk of dropping out.
In MENA, girls’ education is not only about school attendance. It is also about quality learning, confidence, digital access, life skills, safety, and pathways into future work. When girls learn, they are better prepared to participate in the economy and make decisions about their lives.
Protection From Violence And Harmful Practices
UNICEF works to prevent and respond to violence against children, including forms of violence that disproportionately affect girls. This includes child marriage, exploitation, sexual violence, harassment, female genital mutilation where present, and unsafe environments at home, in schools, online, or during displacement.
Protection is a core empowerment issue. A girl who is unsafe cannot fully benefit from education, health services, skills training, or leadership opportunities. UNICEF’s work helps build systems that can identify risks, support survivors, and change harmful social norms.
Health, Nutrition, And Menstrual Health
Girls’ health affects learning, confidence, attendance, wellbeing, and future opportunity. UNICEF works on health and nutrition programs, including anemia prevention, maternal and child health systems, menstrual health and hygiene, and gender-responsive services for adolescents.
Menstrual health is especially important because stigma, lack of products, poor sanitation, or misinformation can affect girls’ dignity and participation. When these barriers are addressed, girls are more likely to stay active in school and community life.
Adolescent Girls’ Voice And Leadership
UNICEF emphasizes adolescent girls’ voice, agency, and leadership. This includes supporting girls to participate in civic engagement, climate action, peer initiatives, community decision-making, and programs that build confidence and life skills.
This approach matters because girls should not be seen only as vulnerable. They are also leaders, problem-solvers, innovators, advocates, and future decision-makers. In MENA, where youth populations are large, investing in girls’ leadership is a regional development priority.
Gender-Responsive Humanitarian Action
Conflict, displacement, poverty, and climate stress can make girls’ lives more difficult. UNICEF integrates gender equality into humanitarian action so that girls and boys can access services in ways that reflect their specific risks and needs. This includes education in emergencies, psychosocial support, safe reporting systems, child protection, water and sanitation, nutrition, and social protection.
For girls in crisis settings, the right support can prevent school dropout, early marriage, violence, isolation, and long-term loss of opportunity.
Why UNICEF Is Relevant Across Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Morocco, And MENA
In Saudi Arabia and the UAE, UNICEF’s themes connect to youth development, child wellbeing, digital skills, family policies, and future-ready education. In Egypt and Morocco, the conversation includes school retention, rural inclusion, social protection, health, nutrition, and protection from harmful practices. Across the broader region, humanitarian crises make girls’ safety and continuity of learning urgent.
For Bahiyat’s audience, UNICEF adds an essential perspective: women’s empowerment starts early. Policies for girls today become labor market, leadership, health, and entrepreneurship outcomes tomorrow.
What Makes UNICEF’s Gender Work Important
UNICEF’s strength is that it works across the systems that shape childhood: schools, families, health services, social protection, community norms, humanitarian response, and national policies. That makes its gender equality work practical. It does not stop at saying girls deserve equal rights. It asks what services, skills, protections, and systems must exist so girls can actually live those rights.
This is especially important in MENA because progress for women and girls depends on both opportunity and protection. Girls need education, but they also need safety. They need leadership skills, but they also need families and institutions that take their voices seriously. They need health services, but they also need accurate information and dignity.
FAQ About UNICEF
What is UNICEF?
UNICEF is the United Nations children’s agency. It works to protect children’s rights and support their health, education, protection, participation, and wellbeing.
What does UNICEF do for girls in MENA?
UNICEF supports girls through education, health, nutrition, protection, menstrual health, skills, social protection, climate action, and gender-responsive humanitarian programs.
Why is UNICEF important for women’s empowerment?
Because many barriers women face begin in girlhood. UNICEF works on the early systems that shape girls’ safety, learning, confidence, health, and future participation.
Does UNICEF work on gender equality?
Yes. UNICEF has gender equality programs and action plans that address barriers affecting children, with targeted attention to adolescent girls and the systems around them.
How does UNICEF support girls in emergencies?
UNICEF supports education, protection, health, psychosocial support, nutrition, water and sanitation, and safe reporting systems in humanitarian settings.



