Australia Indonesia Youth Exchange Program

The Australia-Indonesia Youth Exchange Program (AIYEP) is an exchange program which aims to provide opportunities for young Australians and Indonesians through social, professional and cultural exchange.[1]

The program sees 18 Indonesian participants (9 male, 9 female) aged between 21-25 undertake professional development activities in an Australian state or territory to experience through a rural and urban phase. Then after two months, they meet their Australian counterparts - and together they travel to Indonesia where they undertake a similar experience in an Indonesian province as a group of 36. In Indonesia they experience both a rural homestay and an urban area.

History

The program was established in 1981 and is an initiative of the Australia-Indonesia Institute (Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade).[2]

Locations

  • 2019/20: Canberra-Queensland/East Java
  • 2018/19: Victoria/Riau
  • 2017/18: Central Coast-Canberra-Sydney/Babakan Baru-Kaur-Bengkulu City
  • 2016/17: South Australia/South Sulawesi
  • 2015/16: New South Wales/West Kalimantan
  • 2014/15: Western Australia/South Kalimantan
  • 2013/14: New South Wales/West Sumatra
  • 2012/13: Victoria/Yogyakarta
  • 2011/12: South Australia/Riau
  • 2010/11: Queensland/Southeast Sulawesi
  • 2009/10: Western Australia/Bangka Belitung
  • 2008/09: New South Wales/East Java
  • 2001/02:(Melbourne-Mildura-Canberra)-(Lampung-Kalianda-Rajabasa)
gollark: I got 4 diamonds one time, then the TBM ran out of fuel and I left.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Thoughts? Is this *too* cheaty?
gollark: Given that our slag production makes *about* one per ten seconds (probably less), and 12.8 units of 5 coal would be needed for 1 diamond, we could get one diamond every two minutes or so.
gollark: I figured out a terrible, terrible (in the sense of being slightly cheaty) way to get diamonds:1. hook up slag production to thermal centrifuge (there's a 1 slag -> tiny gold dust + 5 coal dust recipe)2. feed coal to compactor (makes compressed coal balls; without this it would need flint, but that's easy too)3. compress the coal ball into a ... compressed coal ball4. compress the compressed coal balls into a coal chunk (usually this would require obsidian, iron or bricks, but the compactor skips that too - obsidian is automateable easily but with large power input, though)5. compress coal chunk into diamond

References

  1. Australia-Indonesia Institute. "Advice to Applicants". Archived from the original on 18 September 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  2. "About AIYEP". The Communications Network. Missing or empty |url= (help)
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