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Update news vietnam youth
Young Vietnamese have left the city in droves for countryside to pursue a pastoral life with the nature, start their business, or simply find themselves. Join us to see their stories.
First Secretary of the Youth Union Nguyen Anh Tuan held a dialogue with young people and members of the Youth Union on March 16.
In front of her smartphone camera, Ha Lam Truc, 11, confidently speaks English, performs her favorite rap songs, and dubs famous movies.
We must promote innovation in the public sector, and a state management system that is flexible and adaptable in order to utilize all resources in society.
A young man in central Vietnam has helped his family escape poverty by chicken breeding and planting peach trees.
Nguyen Quang Tung spent one gap year taking a trans-Vietnam trip, but his aim was not just to travel.
Nguyen Minh Hau wants to do more than study, he wants to give back to his community.
Students who win a gold medal at International Olympiads, or triumph at science and engineering fairs (ISEF) for two consecutive times,
Nguyen Thi Ngoan, 27, was said to be “crazy” when she quit her job as a graphic designer to produce and make wooden fish.
Fame and high incomes have prompted many young people to offer streaming content on internet platforms.
Dream Concert CONNECT, a virtual K-pop show, took place at the National Academy of Music from July 25 to 26, attracting over 800 young people who got to experience the first event of its kind in Hanoi.
More than 350,000 young people and members of the Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union are taking part in the 2020 Mua He Xanh (Green Summer), which began on Sunday in HCM City.
Since a Government Decree limiting alcohol consumption took effect early this year, many people, especially the young, have started to meet friends in tea houses or other venues without alcoholic beverages.
In Vietnam, Gen-Zers make up one-seventh of the country’s population. Born between 1995 and 2015, they exist in a world where the line of the physical and digital world is blurry at best. They start to emerge and become leaders in the future.
The digital revolution in Vietnam has changed how young people interact with brands, according to the latest study of Vietnamese Millennials and Gen Z by ASEAN integrated marketing agency Vero.