Association of Ozeros Nations: Difference between revisions
Hierophant (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Hierophant (talk | contribs) m (Added mission statement) |
||
(10 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown) | |||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
|image_map = AMOS Nations Map.png | |image_map = AMOS Nations Map.png | ||
|map_caption = Map of Member Countries | |map_caption = Map of Member Countries | ||
|map_width = | |map_width = 280px | ||
|capital = | |capital = | ||
|largest_settlement = | |largest_settlement = | ||
Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
{{collapsible list | {{collapsible list | ||
|titlestyle = background:transparent;text-align:left;font-weight:normal; | |titlestyle = background:transparent;text-align:left;font-weight:normal; | ||
|title = | |title = Members | ||
|{{flag|Ankat}} | |{{flag|Ankat}} | ||
|{{flag| | |{{flag|Daobac}} | ||
|{{flag|Fahran}} | |{{flag|Fahran}} | ||
|{{flag| | |{{flag|Kainuinoa}} | ||
|{{flag|Kajera}} | |||
|{{flag|M'biruna}} | |{{flag|M'biruna}} | ||
|{{flag|Onekawa-Nukanoa}} | |{{flag|Onekawa-Nukanoa}} | ||
Line 58: | Line 59: | ||
|legislature = | |legislature = | ||
|sovereignty_type = Formation | |sovereignty_type = Formation | ||
|established_event1 = | |established_event1 = [[Karaihe Conference]] | ||
|established_date1 = April 17th, 1952 | |established_date1 = April 17th, 1952 | ||
|established_event2 = Official Declaration and Treatise | |established_event2 = Official Declaration and Treatise | ||
Line 99: | Line 100: | ||
|titlestyle = background:transparent;text-align:left;font-weight:normal; | |titlestyle = background:transparent;text-align:left;font-weight:normal; | ||
|title = | |title = | ||
| [[Rigganit]](PKR; Pulau Keramat)| | | [[Pulatec Pula|Pula]] (PLP; Pulacan)| | ||
| [[Rigganit]] (PKR; Pulau Keramat)| | |||
|time_zone = | |time_zone = | ||
|utc_offset_DST = | |utc_offset_DST = | ||
Line 106: | Line 108: | ||
}}}} | }}}} | ||
The '''Association of Ozeros Nations''' ('''AON'''), is an intergovernmental organization whose primary focus lies on the the propagation of mutual development and the supranational governing structures within the Ozeros. Composing of several member states between all three continents that border the Ozeros Sea, the union promotes environmental, infrastructural, educational, and sociocultural development amongst themselves and the greater region. | |||
AON | AON member nations are not limited or restricted in their outward levels of cooperation, with states able to cooperate in other economic or political unions whilst retaining membership within the regionally focused organization. Because of the varied socio-political statuses of the nations within AON, the body is recognized as one of the most effective networks for cooperation and engagement, hailed as an influential environmental body, and maintains a collective network of allies and partners that spans the near entirety of Ajax. | ||
== Mission Statement == | |||
AON identifies their organizational structure as premised on the following standards and focus areas: | |||
# The Association of Ozeros Nations serves to codify and develop a shared standard of education institution quality and practices, with the intent of ensuring that the interregional exchange of ideas and labor are qualified under mutually developed standards of qualification. This focus area emphasizes the development of common curriculum to be universally accessible at primary school institutions, shared board examination standards to apply to secondary, technical, and vocational school accreditation, and the development of a multinational university system. | |||
# The Association of Ozeros Nations serves to ensure a universalized facilitation of environmental resource management and preservation premised on values of sustainable development, progressive conservation, and a collaborative defense of biodiversity and ecological stability through collaborative security measures. This focus area emphasizes the development of a trans-national armed service whose detail and purview is facilitated by the Ozeros International Environmental Agency, shared language on the standards of preservation and conservation, and the mutual development of environmentally conscious technologies and infrastructure. | |||
# The Association of Ozeros Nations serves to integrate national standards of travel and movement so as to cohesively ensure movement towards a region-wide freedom of movement, integrating customs and border governance standards and training measures. This focus area includes the development, expansion, and maintenance of a trans-border zone for civilian and infrastructure movement, as well as the restructuring of public infrastructure services to more cohesively operate in transnational contexts. | |||
# The Association of Ozeros Nations serves to propagate and develop funding mechanisms to support governance bodies emphasizing areas of shared scientific and cultural development, including key areas of health services, space and deep sea exploration, energy technologies, and agricultural technologies. This focus area includes the development of agency bodies, proliferation of public access grants, and the establishment of an annual fora to present, highlight, and publish critical research in the aforementioned key areas. | |||
==History== | ==History== | ||
Prior to the formation of the Association, bilateral tensions held between [[Pulau Keramat]] and [[Onekawa-Nukanoa]] had been a mounting pressure on the eastern Ozerosi region, | Prior to the formation of the Association, bilateral tensions held between [[Pulau Keramat]] and [[Onekawa-Nukanoa]] had been a mounting pressure on the eastern Ozerosi region, derived from contrasting political systems and a growing globalist expectation of deviation from one another. Because of this, and a mutual desire to further represent hegemonic levels of influence, the two nations were inherently engaged in a tense contest to one another in terms of influence, networks, and capacity, namely based in sociocultural promotion as to display quality of life of their respective nations, whilst also maintaining a hard presence in the Karaihe, in mounting levels of militaristic escalation and defense system growth. | ||
However, a conference was called by surrounding states, | However, a conference was called by surrounding states, namely [[Ankat]] and [[Zanzali]], whose own populations, governance and economies had been notably impacted by the threat of warfare in the region, and thus took a proactive stance on deescalation, and formulating a plan to reconcile from this differentiation, especially given the suspect belief that foreign interests were promoting the two nations in order to profit from war-time spending. This conference, now known as the [[Karaihe Conference]], took place on the 17th of April, 1952 and was the primary foundation of the Association. | ||
==Organizational Structure== | ==Organizational Structure== | ||
Line 120: | Line 130: | ||
===Kariahe Border Control Agreement=== | ===Kariahe Border Control Agreement=== | ||
Pulau Keramat, Zanzali, Pulacan, and Onekawa-Nukanoa share open borders, allowing their citizens unrestricted freedom of movement in all four countries. Other AON | Pulau Keramat, Zanzali, Pulacan, and Onekawa-Nukanoa share open borders, allowing their citizens unrestricted freedom of movement in all four countries. Other AON member countries have more relaxed identity document requirements, and controls on entry are carried out at the first country of entry. | ||
=== International Aeronautical Union === | |||
{{see_also|International Aeronautical Union}} | |||
The International Aeronautical Union (IAU) is an independent {{wp|Government agency|agency}} of the AON that is responsible for pioneering and coordinating the activities of its member states civilian {{wp|space exploration|space program}}. The IAU was founded in 1970, is headquartered in [[Congvat]] and has a permanent staff of XXXX people. Member states of the AON contribute to the IAU in various ways. Some contribute solely by providing funding for the organization, others provide various facilities related to the study of space exploration such as launch, and vehicle manufacturing facilities, observatories and research labs. Others nations who do not have much in the way of extra funds for government spending, contribute by providing land that is suitable for IAU sponsored launch service providers to lease, construct and operate launch or research facilities in their countries. The presence of the IAU allows its member states to tap into a larger pool of resources, of which both expertise and cost can be shared among one another. For states that do not have launch capability they are now able to more easily have and request access to launch their own satellites from member states that do have that capability. All member states are also able to utilize IAU sponsored research facilities for academic and development purposes such as observatories, research laboratories and manufacturing facilities. The IAU is most well known for providing {{wp|commercial launch services}} for both member and non-member states as well as its unmanned probe programs. | |||
==Trans-Malaio Rail System== | ==Trans-Malaio Rail System== | ||
==Birhanu Environmental Pact== | ==Birhanu Environmental Pact== | ||
{{Template:Ajax info pages}} | |||
[[Category:Ajax]] | [[Category:Ajax]] | ||
[[Category:Ankat]] | |||
[[Category:Daobac]] | |||
[[Category:Fahran]] | |||
[[Category:Kajera]] | |||
[[Category:M'biruna]] | |||
[[Category:Onekawa-Nukanoa]] | [[Category:Onekawa-Nukanoa]] | ||
[[Category:Pulacan]] | |||
[[Category:Pulau Keramat]] | [[Category:Pulau Keramat]] | ||
[[Category:Vardana]] | |||
[[Category:Zanzali]] | |||
[[Category:Organizations]] | [[Category:Organizations]] | ||
[[Category:Organizations (Ajax)]] | [[Category:Organizations (Ajax)]] |
Latest revision as of 23:47, 4 December 2024
Association of Ozeros Nations
| |||
---|---|---|---|
Flag | |||
Official languages | |||
Type | Regional Organization | ||
Member states | |||
Leaders | |||
Thaumai Sim Cuah | |||
Formation | |||
April 17th, 1952 | |||
• Official Declaration and Treatise | August 4th, 1957 | ||
Currency |
The Association of Ozeros Nations (AON), is an intergovernmental organization whose primary focus lies on the the propagation of mutual development and the supranational governing structures within the Ozeros. Composing of several member states between all three continents that border the Ozeros Sea, the union promotes environmental, infrastructural, educational, and sociocultural development amongst themselves and the greater region.
AON member nations are not limited or restricted in their outward levels of cooperation, with states able to cooperate in other economic or political unions whilst retaining membership within the regionally focused organization. Because of the varied socio-political statuses of the nations within AON, the body is recognized as one of the most effective networks for cooperation and engagement, hailed as an influential environmental body, and maintains a collective network of allies and partners that spans the near entirety of Ajax.
Mission Statement
AON identifies their organizational structure as premised on the following standards and focus areas:
- The Association of Ozeros Nations serves to codify and develop a shared standard of education institution quality and practices, with the intent of ensuring that the interregional exchange of ideas and labor are qualified under mutually developed standards of qualification. This focus area emphasizes the development of common curriculum to be universally accessible at primary school institutions, shared board examination standards to apply to secondary, technical, and vocational school accreditation, and the development of a multinational university system.
- The Association of Ozeros Nations serves to ensure a universalized facilitation of environmental resource management and preservation premised on values of sustainable development, progressive conservation, and a collaborative defense of biodiversity and ecological stability through collaborative security measures. This focus area emphasizes the development of a trans-national armed service whose detail and purview is facilitated by the Ozeros International Environmental Agency, shared language on the standards of preservation and conservation, and the mutual development of environmentally conscious technologies and infrastructure.
- The Association of Ozeros Nations serves to integrate national standards of travel and movement so as to cohesively ensure movement towards a region-wide freedom of movement, integrating customs and border governance standards and training measures. This focus area includes the development, expansion, and maintenance of a trans-border zone for civilian and infrastructure movement, as well as the restructuring of public infrastructure services to more cohesively operate in transnational contexts.
- The Association of Ozeros Nations serves to propagate and develop funding mechanisms to support governance bodies emphasizing areas of shared scientific and cultural development, including key areas of health services, space and deep sea exploration, energy technologies, and agricultural technologies. This focus area includes the development of agency bodies, proliferation of public access grants, and the establishment of an annual fora to present, highlight, and publish critical research in the aforementioned key areas.
History
Prior to the formation of the Association, bilateral tensions held between Pulau Keramat and Onekawa-Nukanoa had been a mounting pressure on the eastern Ozerosi region, derived from contrasting political systems and a growing globalist expectation of deviation from one another. Because of this, and a mutual desire to further represent hegemonic levels of influence, the two nations were inherently engaged in a tense contest to one another in terms of influence, networks, and capacity, namely based in sociocultural promotion as to display quality of life of their respective nations, whilst also maintaining a hard presence in the Karaihe, in mounting levels of militaristic escalation and defense system growth.
However, a conference was called by surrounding states, namely Ankat and Zanzali, whose own populations, governance and economies had been notably impacted by the threat of warfare in the region, and thus took a proactive stance on deescalation, and formulating a plan to reconcile from this differentiation, especially given the suspect belief that foreign interests were promoting the two nations in order to profit from war-time spending. This conference, now known as the Karaihe Conference, took place on the 17th of April, 1952 and was the primary foundation of the Association.
Organizational Structure
Kariahe Border Control Agreement
Pulau Keramat, Zanzali, Pulacan, and Onekawa-Nukanoa share open borders, allowing their citizens unrestricted freedom of movement in all four countries. Other AON member countries have more relaxed identity document requirements, and controls on entry are carried out at the first country of entry.
International Aeronautical Union
The International Aeronautical Union (IAU) is an independent agency of the AON that is responsible for pioneering and coordinating the activities of its member states civilian space program. The IAU was founded in 1970, is headquartered in Congvat and has a permanent staff of XXXX people. Member states of the AON contribute to the IAU in various ways. Some contribute solely by providing funding for the organization, others provide various facilities related to the study of space exploration such as launch, and vehicle manufacturing facilities, observatories and research labs. Others nations who do not have much in the way of extra funds for government spending, contribute by providing land that is suitable for IAU sponsored launch service providers to lease, construct and operate launch or research facilities in their countries. The presence of the IAU allows its member states to tap into a larger pool of resources, of which both expertise and cost can be shared among one another. For states that do not have launch capability they are now able to more easily have and request access to launch their own satellites from member states that do have that capability. All member states are also able to utilize IAU sponsored research facilities for academic and development purposes such as observatories, research laboratories and manufacturing facilities. The IAU is most well known for providing commercial launch services for both member and non-member states as well as its unmanned probe programs.