---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Jonathan Donner
Date: Thursday, December 13, 2012
Subject: Call for Papers and Notes – ICTD2013, Cape Town, Dec 7-10 2013
To: "prog...@ictd2013.info" <prog...@ictd2013.info>


Call for Papers and Notes – ICTD2013
Sixth International Conference on Information and Communication
Technologies and Development (ICTD2013), Cape Town, South Africa

Conference dates: December 7-10, 2013
Paper submission deadline: May 1, 2013 (11:59pm UTC)
Conference website: http://www.ictd2013.info
Contact us at: prog...@ictd2013.info
Follow or visit at: Twitter @ICTD2013   Facebook: www.facebook.com/ICTD2013

NOTE:
New for 2013, there will be two kinds of manuscripts accepted into the ICTD
program track: Full Papers and Notes.

CONFERENCE AND PROGRAM OVERVIEW:
Held in cooperation with ACM SIGCHI and ACM SIGCAS, ICTD2013 will provide
an international forum for scholarly researchers exploring the role of
information and communication technologies (ICTs) in social, political, and
economic development. Hosted by the University of Cape Town and the
University of the Western Cape in Cape Town, South Africa, ICTD2013 is the
sixth of an ongoing series of conferences occurring every one-and-a-half
years; previous conferences have taken place in: Berkeley, CA (USA) ICTD
2006; Bangalore (India) ICTD 2007; Doha (Qatar) ICTD 2009; London (United
Kingdom) ICTD 2010, and Atlanta, GA (USA) ICTD 2012.

Over decades, as radio and television have been joined by computers, the
internet, and mobile devices, information and communication technologies
(ICTs) have become more pervasive, more accessible, and more relevant in
the lives of people around the world. Virtually no sphere of human activity
remains apart from ICTs, from markets to health care, education to
governance, family life to artistic expression. Diverse groups across the
world interact with, are affected by, and can shape the design of these
technologies. The ICTD conference is a place to understand these
interactions, and to examine, critique, and refine the persistent,
pervasive hope that ICTs can be enlisted by individuals and communities in
the service of human development. There are multidisciplinary challenges
associated with the engineering, application and adoption of ICTs in
developing regions and/or for development, with implications for design,
policy, and practice.
For the purposes of this conference, the term "ICT" comprises electronic
technologies for information processing and communication, as well as
systems, interventions, and platforms that are built on such technologies.
"Development" includes, but is not restricted to, poverty alleviation,
education, agriculture, healthcare, general communication, gender equality,
governance, infrastructure, environment and sustainable livelihoods. The
conference program will reflect the multidisciplinary nature of ICTD
research, with anticipated contributions from fields including
anthropology, computer science, communication, design, economics,
electrical engineering, geography, human-computer interaction, information
science, information systems, political science, public health, and
sociology.

In addition to inviting the Full Papers and Notes detailed here, the
conference will offer a variety of opportunities for participation,
including open sessions, pre-workshops, and demos. Check our website for
further calls.

CALL FOR FULL PAPERS:
Full Papers (ten pages in ACM two-column format) will be evaluated via
double-blind peer review by a multidisciplinary panel of at least three
readers, overseen by an experienced associate chair.

Full Papers will be evaluated according to their novel research
contribution, methodological soundness, theoretical framing and reference
to related work, quality of analysis, and quality of writing and
presentation. Manuscripts considering novel designs, new technologies,
project assessments, policy analyses, impact studies, theoretical
contributions, social issues around ICT and development, and so forth will
be considered. Well-analyzed negative results from which generalizable
conclusions can be drawn are also sought. Authors are encouraged (but not
required) to address the diversity of approaches in ICTD research by
providing context, implications, and actionable guidance to researchers and
practitioners beyond the authors’ primary domains.

Accepted Full Papers will appear in electronic conference proceedings and
will be archived in the ACM digital library. A subset of the Full Papers
will also appear in a special issue of Information Technologies &
International Development. New in 2013, authors of all accepted Full Papers
will be invited to give a talk, either in plenary or in parallel sessions.

Only original, unpublished, research papers in English will be considered.
Papers must use the templates (LaTex and Word) available on the submissions
page, and must be no longer than 10 pages. Submissions longer than 10
pages, not in the template format, not related to the conference themes,
and/or not meeting a minimum bar of academic research writing will be
rejected without full review. Full Papers must not include names or other
information that would identify the authors.

Full papers must uploaded via the submissions page by the deadline, May 1,
2013 (11:59pm UTC).  Formatting instructions and links to the upload page
can be found at the conference submissions page. Authors will be required
to sign a copyright release to ACM for publication in the conference
proceedings.

CALL FOR NOTES:
For ICTD2013, a new document category, Notes, is available. With a shorter
4-page format, Notes are intended to highlight work from a range of
researchers and practitioners, and can be used to introduce
work-in-progress that may be published later in a journal, as well as to
document shorter project write-ups.

Notes will be evaluated by at least two multidisciplinary reviewers, but
not in a double-blind fashion. Notes will be assessed according to their
research contribution, methodological soundness, quality of analysis, and
quality of writing, and presentation. Manuscripts considering novel
designs, new technologies, project assessments, policy analyses, impact
studies, theoretical contributions, social issues around ICT and
development, and so forth will be considered, however Notes need not
necessarily be as comprehensive, novel, or generalizable as Full Papers.

All Notes submissions are strictly limited to four pages. To allow for
late-breaking findings, Notes are due on July 26, 2013, closer to the date
of the conference. The 4-page manuscripts of the Notes will be made
available in the ACM Digital Library under a separate heading of "ICTD2013
Notes", but unlike Full Papers, copyright for Notes will be retained by the
authors.

Only original, unpublished manuscripts in English will be considered.
Submissions must use the templates (LaTex and Word) available on the
submissions page, and must be no longer than 4 pages. Submissions longer
than 4 pages, not in the template format, not related to the conference
themes, and/or not meeting a minimum bar of academic research writing will
be rejected without full review. Authors of accepted Notes will be required
to prepare a poster; template is available here.

Authors of accepted Notes will be invited to present in one or more poster
sessions during ICTD2013. Note that since the Full Paper and Notes
submission review cycles will be sequential; it will be possible to revise,
shorten, and resubmit elements of promising but unselected Full Papers in
time for reconsideration in the separate Notes review round.

KEY DATES:
March 1, 2013: paper submission site opens
May 1, 2013: deadline for submission of Full Papers
June 21, 2013: notification of acceptances for Full Papers
July 26, 2013: deadline for submission of Notes
July 26, 2013: deadline for application for travel scholarships
August 23, 2103: notification of acceptances for Notes
September 6, 2013: camera-ready Full Papers and Notes due
December 7-10, 2013: ICTD2013 in Cape Town

GENERAL CONFERENCE CHAIRS
Gary Marsden, University of Cape Town
Julian May, University of the Western Cape

PROGRAM COMMITTEE CHAIRS
Jonathan Donner, Microsoft Research India
Tapan Parikh, University of California, Berkeley

NOTES CHAIRS
Edwin Blake, University of Cape Town
Marshini Chetty, University of Maryland, College Park

SENIOR PROGRAM COMMITTEE (PRELIMINARY)
Jenny Aker, Tufts University
Richard Anderson, University of Washington
Michael Best, Georgia Institute of Technology
Joshua Blumenstock, University of Washington
Gaetano Borriello, University of Washington
Jenna Burrell, University of California, Berkeley
Ed Cutrell, Microsoft Research India
Vanessa Frias-Martinez, Telefonica I+D
Alison Gillwald, Research ICT Africa
Dorothea Kleine, Royal Holloway, University of London
Shirin Madon, London School of Economics and Political Science
Gillian Marcelle, University of the Witwatersrand
Judith Mariscal, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas
Joyojeet Pal, University of Michigan
Balaji Parthasarathy, International Institute of Information Technology,
Bangalore
Idris Rai, State University of Zanzibar
Krithi Ramamritham, International Institute of Information Technology,
Bangalore
Roni Rosenfeld, Carnegie Mellon University
Umar Saif, Lahore University of Management Sciences
Aaditeshwar Seth, Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi
Matthew Smith, International Development Research Centre
Revi Sterling, University of Colorado Boulder
Lakshmi Subramanian, New York University
Bill Thies, Microsoft Research India
Kentaro Toyama, University of California, Berkeley
Bjorn van Campenhout, Universiteit Antwerpen
Tim Waema, University of Nairobi
Terry Winograd, Stanford University
Ellen Zegura, Georgia Institute of Technology
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