The Mie Prefectural Government has signed a memorandum with Vietnam's labor ministry and Hanoi University of Science and Technology on securing・・・
I am 79 years old and currently living in Switzerland. In the past, I spent six years studying and living in Japan. After reading about Vietnam's new traffic penalties and the public's reaction to stricter fines,
Many Japanese firms are planning to expand their operations in Vietnam this year to exploit the country's growth potential.
Ministry officials are considering the Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Mongolia and Djibouti as recipients because they are all geopolitically important partners for Japan ...
To make a direct call to Japan From Vietnam, you need to follow the international dialing format given below. The dialing format is same for calling Japan mobile or land line from Vietnam. To call Japan from Vietnam, dial: 00 - 81 - Area Code - Land Phone ...
American and European contractors were out in full force for the country's biennial defense expo in Hanoi in December 2024.
The banh chung are often laid at family altars as an offering to ancestors, who are widely venerated in Vietnam -- a communist country that ... I can't imagine a Tet without banh chung." Japan's snowy escape in northern Tohoku. Discover pristine powdery ...
Steven Wolstenholme, a British born, American business leader with nearly seven years of experience in Vietnam, shares his observations on the country's significant transformation as it advances into what he describes as its "awakening era".
Japan saw its biggest year-on-year jump in foreign workers since records began, government data showed Friday, as the country seeks to address labor shortages exacerbated by its aging population.
Zebra Technologies’ CEO Bill Burns discusses the company’s growth strategy and how it is enhancing frontline worker capabilities through machine vision, artificial intelligence and robotics
ROGER W. FERGUSON, JR., is the Steven A. Tananbaum Distinguished Fellow for International Economics at the Council on Foreign Relations.
Launched in December 1986, Vietnam’s “reform” era (đổi mới) came to an end in August 2024. Domestic political events in the ensuing months ushered the country into a new era, although the coming period may turn out to be a Gramscian interregnum, when “the old is dying and the new cannot be born.”