Hi Change folks,


If you plan to attend the ICT/Disability workshop, please let me know, space is 
VERY tight, and unless you are really interested in the topic I may request you 
to pass because we need all the seats we can have and the room only seats 50 
people - about 30 spots are already gone.



Let me know if you definitely plan to be there and participate and I will keep 
your names in. Here is the announcement below:



Joyojeet



Technology and Disability in the Developing World

Research and Practice Workshop

October 2, 2009
Gates Commons, Paul Allen 
Center<http://www.washington.edu/home/maps/southcentral.html?CSE> (CSE 691)
University of Washington, Seattle

Disability is defined in physical, social, and rights-based terms. Following 
significant legal and social activism in several nations, much interest in both 
academia and industry has been invested in creating tools and frameworks of 
access for persons with disabilities. However, in several parts of the 
developing world, accessibility issues continue to face economic and social 
challenges. This workshop attempts to bring together scholars and practitioners 
working in the area of technology and disability in the developing world to 
discuss recent developments and chart possible areas of collaboration in this 
domain.

The goal of the workshop is to discuss the following:

 1.  Review selected cases within low-cost technology development and 
deployment for disabled populations in terms of infrastructure, products, and 
service delivery
 2.  Review recent research on social and economic issues around the access to 
technological tools for the disabled
 3.  Create relationships and discuss actionable steps for collaborative work 
ahead

Planned Sessions

 1.  Social, Legal, and Business issues around the use of technology in 
developing regions: In this session, we will discuss social issues around 
technology access for the disabled, the impacts of national legislative 
measures and international initiatives on access, employability and the 
business of developing technological tools for the disabled. Invited talks 
include a discussion of social issues around technology centers for the 
disabled in Latin America and the role of advocacy in expanding employability 
for the disabled.
 2.  Technological issues: In this session, we will discuss current 
implementations and future areas of development of low-cost technology for the 
disabled. Invited talks include a discussion of typical failure cases of 
software for the visually impaired, open source tools as options to proprietary 
software, low cost computing hardware and navigation devices for motor 
disabilities.
 3.  Break-out roundtables: In this session, we will break groups by domains of 
interest in an effort to discuss desirables and collaborative steps ahead 
either in research or in practice.

Format

The workshop will be a full-day event with presentation sessions followed by 
one break-up roundtable discussion session. The presentation sessions will be 
arranged around invited speakers, each discussing for 20 minutes a specific 
issue or case with broader relevance for the state of technical, social, legal, 
or business issues around technology and disability in the developing world. A 
detailed program will be online shortly.

Sponsors

Change<http://change.washington.edu/>
Disability Studies<http://depts.washington.edu/disstud/>
Center for Information and Society<http://cis.washington.edu/>
AccessComputing<http://www.washington.edu/accesscomputing/>

For further details, and to participate, please contact Joyojeet 
Pal<http://mailhide.recaptcha.net/d?k=019-vbZyUw2LdDz28bfimzhg==&c=1eeVoBPmILx4FELgkVAz93qMc6sclg42r6G2F5ZSPwg=>.



Session speakers (subject to change)



1. Becky Matter/Dennis Lang, Disability Studies, UW "Landscape of Social Issues 
around Technology and Disability in the Developing world"

2. Philip Neff, JSIS, UW "Socio-economic issues in expanding  access to the 
disabled in Latin America: Evidence from Ecuador, Venezuela, Mexico, and 
Guatemala

3. Rahul Cherian, InclusivePlanet "Internationalizing a Legal Framework for 
Services for the Disabled"

4. James Thurston, Microsoft, "Advocacy for accessibility in the developing 
world"

5. David Rojas, POETA, Organization of American States " ICTs as facilitators 
of social and labor inclusion for people with disabilities "

6. Chandrika Jayant, CSE, UW "Landscape of Technical issues around PCs for the 
Disabled "

7. Sangyun Hanh, CSE, UW "Low cost and Open Source Tools for the Blind: State 
of Technology and Ways Ahead"

8. Jacob Wobbrock, iSchool, UW " Ability-based Design: Concept, Principles, and 
Examples."

9. Michele Frix, CIS, UW "Common technical failures in low-resource 
envorinments - examples from field research in Latin America"

10. Victor Tsaran, Yahoo "Accessible Web services for the blind: ethnographic 
evidence from research in 7 countries"

11. Shaun Kane, Intel Research Seattle / UW " Supporting independent navigation 
using commodity mobile phones"

12.  Richard Ladner, CSE, UW "Low-cost technology for the Deaf/Hard of Hearing"


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