A timely forum on families in the East Asia region

 

You are in an archived section of the AIFS website 

 

Content type
Family Matters article
Published

September 2004

Download Family Matters article

Abstract

The first-ever East Asia Ministerial Forum on Families was held in April 2004, ten years after the United Nations International Year of the Family. It threw light on similarities and differences between participating countries regarding the various forms and functions of families, the current challenges faced by families in each country (particularly those linked with modernisation processes), and policies and programs established in each country to protect, support and thus strengthen its families. The forum culminated in the Hanoi Statement for Regional Cooperation on the Family. The author of this article attended the forum. She provides a synthesis of the various country statements on family issues, and outlines the nature of cooperative activities to which participating governments committed themselves in signing the Statement.

The first-ever East Asia Ministerial Forum on Families was held in April 2004, ten years after the United Nations International Year of the Family. It threw light on similarities and differences between participating countries regarding the various forms and functions of families, the current challenges faced by families in each country (particularly those linked with modernisation processes), and policies and programs established in each country to protect, support and thus strengthen its families. The forum culminated in the Hanoi Statement for Regional Cooperation on the Family. The author of this article attended the forum. She provides a synthesis of the various country statements on family issues, and outlines the nature of cooperative activities to which participating governments committed themselves in signing the Statement.

You are in an archived section of the Australian Institute of Family Studies website. Articles in this issue of Family Matters are only available as PDF documents and do not meet the latest web accessibility standards. If you are unable to access any of the articles in this issue of Family Matters please contact us and we will endeavour to provide the article/s you need in a format that you can use.

Share