UNICEF's ten nearest neighbors span UN agencies, human rights bodies, international news publishers, and a film awards organization — a mixed cluster with no single dominant type, compressed into a narrow band from 0.99 down to 0.96.
The shape is flat. The top score belongs to United Nations at 0.99, followed closely by UN Human Rights at 0.99 and Human Rights Watch at 0.98. These three are the densest part of the cluster, but the gap between them and the rest of the top 10 is small. UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency sits at 0.98, UNESCO at 0.97, and World Food Programme at 0.97. So far, the pattern looks like a tight ring of intergovernmental and non-profit organizations — five of the top six neighbors share the Organizations category, spanning Government, Environmental, Activism, and Non-Profit subcategories.
The seventh and eighth positions introduce a cross-kind element: Amnesty International USA at 0.97 and Amnesty International at 0.97 are both Non-Profits, keeping the organizational cluster intact. But positions nine and ten break from it entirely: NowThis News at 0.96 and TIME at 0.96 are Marketing Channels — a News Publisher and a Magazine, respectively. No other Non-Profit appears in the top 10 beyond the ones already named, and no celebrity, brand, or political figure reaches this tier.
The overall picture is an audience defined by international civic engagement — one that moves fluidly between UN-system organizations and global news media without a clear boundary between the two.