Thought this might be of interest to list members... -ac

-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        Call for papers-ICT4D and universities
Date:   Mon, 9 May 2005 15:09:33 -0700
From:   Raul Roman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

/Information Technologies and International Development /(ITID) is a
leading MIT Press journal that focuses on the intersection of
information and communication technologies (ICTs) with international
development. ITID invites submissions for a special issue titled
âInformation Technology, Higher Education, and Sustainable Development:
The Role of Universities in Building Knowledge Societies in Africa,
Asia, and Latin America.â This special issue will address how
universities in developing countries are implementing innovative
teaching, research and outreach activities that link ICTs to the
development-related needs and activities of different local and national
stakeholders, including scientists, educators, entrepreneurs,
governments, civil society organizations, and rural communities.  The
issue will reflect how universities in developing countries are seeking
to contribute to âICT for Developmentâ (ICT4D) efforts, the impact of
their efforts upon society and universities, and the internal and
external challenges they face in realizing a productive and meaningful
place in the ICT4D movement.



The goal of this ITID issue is to lay a foundation for research and
policy making in this area. The issue carries the same title as a
conference recently held in Manila (www.cis.washington.edu/manila2005
<http://www.cis.washington.edu/manila2005>). The Manila conference
itself built on previous international meetings at Makerere University
(http://www.makerere.ac.ug/dicts/conference), Cornell University
(http://www.einaudi.cornell.edu/conf/2004/ict), and the 2003 World
Summit on the Information Society
(http://www.wsis-online.net/smsi/classes/ict4d/events/ict4d-events-282979/event-view)


that focused not only on building universitiesâ ICT capacity, but their
capacity to leverage ICT to foster social and economic development.*
*For example, some relevant topics could be (a) the institutional
capacity of universities to create knowledge tailored to different
outside stakeholders; (b) the uses and effects of university involvement
in community projects such as telecenters; (c) the creation of
university programs that prepare students to become professionals in
ICT-enabled development, or (d) efforts by universities to engage in
local, national, or international policy-relevant research on emerging
ICT issues.



The topic of this ITID issue is broad and inherently multidisciplinary.
The editors welcome a diverse pool of submissions from different fields
such as political science, information science, communication research,
education, rural sociology, computer science, telecommunications,
economics, public health, and public policy, among others.



The papers selected will present novel research that is theoretically
grounded and methodologically sound, as well as those that relate to
policy development and practical on-the-ground approaches to realizing
the Millennium Development Goals and creating the building blocks of
knowledge societies. Potential contributors should submit a 750-word
abstract of the proposed article by May 31^st , 2005 to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. Visit http://mitpress.mit.edu/itid for
specific instructions for authors.



The guest editors of this ITID issue (in alphabetical order) are: Royal
D. Colle (Cornell University), Christopher T. Coward (University of
Washington), Colin M. Maclay (Harvard Law School), and Raul Roman
(University of Washington).




-- ----------------------------------- Andy Carvin Program Director EDC Center for Media & Community acarvin @ edc . org http://www.digitaldivide.net http://www.tsunami-info.org Blog: http://www.andycarvin.com -----------------------------------

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