1951, “Contributions to the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF)—H. R. 2785”, inSurvey of Activities of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Representatives, Eighty-first Congress (January 3, 1949–January 2, 1951), Washington, D.C.:United States Government Printing Office,→OCLC, section I (Strengthening United States Participation in International Organizations),page16:
TheUNICEF was established in December 1946 by resolution of the United Nations General Assembly.[…] To present an adequate picture of the problem which the Committee on Foreign Affairs faced during the Eighty-first Congress in connection with theUNICEF, the background of congressional action in the Eightieth Congress is necessary.
2021 May 25, Julia Hollingsworth, “The world’s biggest vaccine maker is stalling on exports. That’s a problem for the planet’s most vulnerable”, inCNN[1]:
According toUNICEF, SII’s delivery delays are a major reason why the COVAX rollout is so behind schedule, along with vaccine nationalism, limited production capacity and a lack of funding. COVAX should have already delivered 170 million total doses,UNICEF said.