 
          MAY/JUNE 2015
        
        
          H
        
        
          business elite canada
        
        
          
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          UNICEF as the entity to protect and pro-
        
        
          mote those rights.
        
        
          “What we do is talk with governments at
        
        
          all levels to make them aware of the Con-
        
        
          vention on the Rights of the Child,” Mor-
        
        
          ley said. “We are advocating for a National
        
        
          Children’sCommissioner, which would be
        
        
          a person at the federal government level.”
        
        
          Just as governments today look at the en-
        
        
          vironmental impact of certain legislation,
        
        
          the commissioner would play a similar
        
        
          role by investigating the government’s ef-
        
        
          fect on children’s rights. That’s one of the
        
        
          biggest changes UNICEF Canada has un-
        
        
          dergone in recent history, by advocating
        
        
          for Canada’s youngest citizens along with
        
        
          those around the world.
        
        
          SUMMER JOB TURNS INTO A
        
        
          LIFELONG CAREER
        
        
          Morley joined UNICEF Canada four years
        
        
          ago but has spent an entire career work-
        
        
          ing in the not-for-profit sector. It began in
        
        
          the late 1970s when he travelled to Costa
        
        
          Rica with an organization called Pueblito,
        
        
          intending to stay for the summer and then
        
        
          return to Canada. Pueblito had founded a
        
        
          children’s village in the Central American
        
        
          country as an alternative to government