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Youth exchange program

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<span>Douglas Ragan, second from left in the front row, chief of the Urban Economy Branch at the UN-Habitat, poses with Duksung Women's University staff and students during an event to launch an exchange program at the school's campus in Seoul on Jan. 23. Sitting with him are Park Sang-im, center, the university's acting president, and Chung In-jae, second from right, dean of international and external affairs at the school. The Global Urban Youth Exchange Program is the first of its kind devised by UN-Habitat and a local university to help developing countries promote<br />sustainable urban development. Twenty-eight students left for Cambodia on Tuesday to serve in Phnom Penh and Kampong Thom until Feb. 10. Their mission is to do field studies and provide policy suggestions to the Cambodian government.<br /><br />/ Courtesy of Duksung Women's University</span><br /><br />
Douglas Ragan, second from left in the front row, chief of the Urban Economy Branch at the UN-Habitat, poses with Duksung Women's University staff and students during an event to launch an exchange program at the school's campus in Seoul on Jan. 23. Sitting with him are Park Sang-im, center, the university's acting president, and Chung In-jae, second from right, dean of international and external affairs at the school. The Global Urban Youth Exchange Program is the first of its kind devised by UN-Habitat and a local university to help developing countries promote
sustainable urban development. Twenty-eight students left for Cambodia on Tuesday to serve in Phnom Penh and Kampong Thom until Feb. 10. Their mission is to do field studies and provide policy suggestions to the Cambodian government.

/ Courtesy of Duksung Women's University


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