Yokohama 2017: Photos
Annual Meeting PhotosView all photos on Flickr
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Germany and ADB officially launched the Asia-Pacific Climate Finance Fund.
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This seminar discussed how information and communication technologies enables more consumer empowerment.
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This seminar discussed how leaders, planners, local governments, private sector, civil society, and development partners can embrace principles of urban resilience, which could drive inclusive and sustainable growth in cities.
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This seminar used recent evaluative findings to steer a discussion on how ADB and other multilateral development banks should reposition themselves in the changing landscape in Asia and the Pacific.
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This seminar reflected on the early progress in responding to the Sustainable Development Goals.
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This meeting provided a dialogue between civil society, government and multilateral institutions on means to promote inclusive and accountable public services, leveraging citizen engagement through social accountability tools and practices and civil society partnerships with governments and ADB.
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Female and male leaders across Asia discussed how governments, companies, and citizens together can accelerate narrowing gender gaps at the workplace, forge women's leadership, and contribute to a more vibrant, inclusive, innovative, and sustainable society in Asia.
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This seminar shared how the Japan Fund for Poverty Reduction helped the most vulnerable groups living in poverty in ADB’s developing member countries for 16 years and discussed the fund’s future direction and how it will continue to fight poverty in Asia and the Pacific.
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In this seminar, specialists from various fields presented their views on the roles of the public and private sector in infrastructure investment, the effects of private participation, the expectations for Japanese stakeholders, and the current situation and future prospects of private sector participation in infrastructure projects in Asian countries.
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Much has been written about Asia’s stellar economic progress in the last 50 years, but how the region has managed to make such progress has continued to be an intensely debated subject. This seminar discussed these issues and drew policy implications for the future.