- ABOUT ASEANThe Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, was established on 8 August 1967 in Bangkok, Thailand, with the signing of the ASEAN Declaration (Bangkok Declaration) by the Founding Fathers of ASEAN: Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand. Brunei Darussalam joined ASEAN on 7 January 1984, followed by Viet Nam on 28 July 1995, Lao PDR and Myanmar on 23 July 1997, and Cambodia on 30 April 1999, making up what is today the ten Member States of ASEAN.Menu
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ASEAN organs always strive to achieve ASEAN’s goals and objectives, the Secretary-General of ASEAN and the ASEAN Secretariat shall be functioned as coordinating Secretariat to help facilitate effective decision-making withing and amongst ASEAN bodies. In addition, each Member State shall appoint a Permanent Representative to liaise with Secretary-General of ASEAN and the ASEAN Secretariat
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ASEAN shall develop friendly relations and mutually beneficial dialogues, cooperation and partnerships with countries and sub-regional, regional and international organisations and institutions. This includes external partners, ASEAN entities, human rights bodies, non-ASEAN Member States Ambassadors to ASEAN, ASEAN committees in third countries and international organisations, as well as international / regional organisations.
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The rodmap for an ASEAN Community (2009-2015) was declared by the leaders in 2009. The ASEAN Community, anchored on three community pillars: Political-Security Community, Economic Community, Socio-Cultural Community was launched in 2015. The ASEAN 2025: Forging Ahead Together was introduced in 2015 as a Post-2015 Vision. It comprises the ASEAN Community Vision 2025, the ASEAN Political-Security Community Blueprint 2025, the ASEAN Economic Community Blueprint 2025 and the ASEAN Socio-Cultural Community Blueprint 2025
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Vision and Strategies of Public Transportation in ASEAN Megacities
Author:Edited by Changhwan Mo, Young-in Kwon, and Sangjun Park
Abstract
Low carbon and green growth are key issues facing urban development today and the growing number of private vehicles in parallel with economic growth in the ASEAN region is of critical problem in terms of environmental sustainability. This project addresses urban transport issues with an objective to promote public transport in the urban areas of ASEAN countries by directly finding the problems of urban public transport in ASEAN cities, consulting ASEAN transport officials about the sustainable strategies of it at two workshops and with two published reports in English, and transferring Korean experiences and technologies of public transport to ASEAN countries so that they can build up a human-oriented and sustainable transport system.
More Details
| Author | Edited by Changhwan Mo, Young-in Kwon, and Sangjun Park |
| Barcode | <000000001176> |
| Edition | |
| Place | Gyeonggi-do |
| Publisher | The Korea Transport Institute |
| Year | 2014 |
| Classification | Economic - ASEAN Economic Minister Meeting (AEM) 217 - Transport Cooperation |
| Call Number | 217 Vis |
| ISBN | 9788955036664 |
| Language | English |
| Content Type | Text Book |
| Media Type | printed |
| Number of copies | 1 |