Re: [DDN] Fwd: CALL FOR PAPERS: IDIA2009 Development Informatics Conference 28-30 October 2009 Kruger National Park, South Africa

2009-03-19 Thread Dominic Hansson

STOP SENDING ME E-MAILS OR I WILL TAKE FURTHER ACTION
 
 From: paul.planti...@infotech.monash.edu
 To: digitaldivide@digitaldivide.net
 Date: Fri, 13 Mar 2009 07:52:17 +0200
 Subject: [DDN] Fwd: CALL FOR PAPERS: IDIA2009 Development Informatics 
 Conference 28-30 October 2009 Kruger National Park, South Africa
 
 Reminder: 
 
 Astracts for the IDIA2009 Development Informatics Conference should be
 submitted online by 14 March 2009: http://www.conftool.net/idia2009/
 
 Updated conference details (incl. fees) are on the website:
 http://www.developmentinformatics.org/conferences/2009/3rd.html 
 
 Key deadlines are:
 
 14 March 2009 Final date for submission of Abstracts
 1 April 2009 Notification of acceptance of Abstracts
 1 June 2009 Full papers due for blind peer review
 1 August 2009 Peer review results
 1 September 2009 Final version of papers due
 
 
  - Original Message -
  From: Paul Plantinga paul.planti...@infotech.monash.edu
  Date: Tuesday, January 13, 2009 5:48 pm
  Subject: [DDN] Fwd: CALL FOR PAPERS: IDIA2009 Development Informatics
  Conference 28-30 October 2009 Kruger National Park, South Africa
  To: digitaldivide@digitaldivide.net
  
   
   CALL FOR PAPERS
   
   IDIA2009 Conference
   28-30 October 2009
   Digitally Empowering Communities:
   Learning from Development Informatics Practice
   
   www.developmentinformatics.org/conferences/2009/3rd.html
   
   
   Call for papers
   
   
   The 3rd International IDIA Conference will be held in Africa in 
   order to 
   make it easier for interested parties of this continent to 
   participate. 
   The conference is aimed at researchers, policy-makers and 
   reflective 
   practitioners. It will be managed by the School of Information 
   Technology, Monash South Africa (Johannesburg). Monash University 
   is 
   seeking to accelerate its engagement internationally, and this 
   conference reflects this commitment.
   
   The Conference will be held at the Berg-en-Dal camp in the Kruger 
   National Park, South Africa.
   
   The Conference Committee calls for papers on the following 
  themes. 
   Papers will be peer-reviewed. Selected papers will be published 
  in 
   an 
   accredited Journal.
   
   While the main language of the conference will be English, 
   participation 
   from Francophone and Portuguese-speaking Africa is most welcome.
   
   1. Communities and empowerment
   
   * What are developing communities?
   * Does every community need to 'develop'?
   * What does 'empowerment' mean in a DI context?
   * Why should communities be empowered with ICT?
   * What are the objectives of empowering communities?
   * What are the methods and instruments to empower communities?
   * Implications of the full range of 'digital divides'.
   
   
   2. Development Informatics and ICT4D
   
   * Satisfying basic development needs with ICT.
   * What ICT cannot achieve; its limitations in development 
  practice. * The range of changing economic models for empowering 
   communities 
   with ICT.
   * What are the special ICT issues for deep rural communities?
   * Giving voices to the poor via ICT; the necessity of advocacy.
   * The relevance of ICT planning and policies.
   * Does development automatically empower; the role of vested 
  ICT 
   interests?
   * Ethical and moral issues, eg. the barefoot economist debate, 
   top-down/bottom-up/dual system approaches, and technological 
   determinism. * Global versus regional implementation
   
   
   3. DI in practice
   
   * What are the technical issues, networking problems, and 
   relevant 
   ICT devices?
   * System design for the bottom of the pyramid of the digital 
  divide * Do small communities benefit from ICT, or is it only 
   applicable on 
   a large (regional, national) scale?
   * How do the micro social groups (eg. households and families) 
   use 
   ICT for their business?
   * Evaluating separate and integrated business, government and 
   civil 
   society ICT solutions.
   * Issues of free access and sustainable access.
   * Business filling the gap in the absence of government 
   co-ordination of ICT practice.
   * When business practice and community expectation collide in 
   ICT, 
   who suffers?
   * Differences between individual access (such as OLPC, mobile 
   phones) and public access (telecentres, MPCCs).
   * Open source vs proprietary systems.
   
   
   4. Opportunities
   
   * The future of skills and literacy training, and professional 
   development, as part of ICT.
   * Opportunities for professional communities to contribute to ICT.
   * Eliciting expressions of local concern and building them into 
   ICT 
   programs.
   * Ensuring that external ICT solutions meet local needs.
   * Balancing short-term and long-term ICT solutions.
   * Universal access as a dream or reality?
   * What is the appropriate role of developed countries in 
   assisting 
   with ICT 

Re: [DDN] Fwd: CALL FOR PAPERS: IDIA2009 Development Informatics Conference 28-30 October 2009 Kruger National Park, South Africa

2009-03-01 Thread Paul Plantinga
Abstracts for the IDIA2009 Development Informatics Conference are due 14
March 2009, and may now be submitted online via
http://www.conftool.net/idia2009/

Key deadlines are:

14 March 2009 Final date for submission of Abstracts
1 April 2009 Notification of acceptance of Abstracts
1 June 2009 Full papers due for blind peer review
1 August 2009 Peer review results
1 September 2009 Final version of papers due


- Original Message -
From: Paul Plantinga paul.planti...@infotech.monash.edu
Date: Tuesday, January 13, 2009 5:48 pm
Subject: [DDN] Fwd: CALL FOR PAPERS: IDIA2009 Development Informatics
Conference 28-30 October 2009 Kruger National Park, South Africa
To: digitaldivide@digitaldivide.net

 
 CALL FOR PAPERS
 
 IDIA2009 Conference
 28-30 October 2009
 Digitally Empowering Communities:
 Learning from Development Informatics Practice
 
 www.developmentinformatics.org/conferences/2009/3rd.html
 
 
 Call for papers
 
 
 The 3rd International IDIA Conference will be held in Africa in 
 order to 
 make it easier for interested parties of this continent to 
 participate. 
 The conference is aimed at researchers, policy-makers and 
 reflective 
 practitioners. It will be managed by the School of Information 
 Technology, Monash South Africa (Johannesburg). Monash University 
 is 
 seeking to accelerate its engagement internationally, and this 
 conference reflects this commitment.
 
 The Conference will be held at the Berg-en-Dal camp in the Kruger 
 National Park, South Africa.
 
 The Conference Committee calls for papers on the following themes. 
 Papers will be peer-reviewed. Selected papers will be published in 
 an 
 accredited Journal.
 
 While the main language of the conference will be English, 
 participation 
 from Francophone and Portuguese-speaking Africa is most welcome.
 
 1. Communities and empowerment
 
   * What are developing communities?
   * Does every community need to 'develop'?
   * What does 'empowerment' mean in a DI context?
   * Why should communities be empowered with ICT?
   * What are the objectives of empowering communities?
   * What are the methods and instruments to empower communities?
   * Implications of the full range of 'digital divides'.
 
 
 2. Development Informatics and ICT4D
 
   * Satisfying basic development needs with ICT.
   * What ICT cannot achieve; its limitations in development practice.
   * The range of changing economic models for empowering 
 communities 
 with ICT.
   * What are the special ICT issues for deep rural communities?
   * Giving voices to the poor via ICT; the necessity of advocacy.
   * The relevance of ICT planning and policies.
   * Does development automatically empower; the role of vested ICT 
 interests?
   * Ethical and moral issues, eg. the barefoot economist debate, 
 top-down/bottom-up/dual system approaches, and technological 
 determinism.   * Global versus regional implementation
 
 
 3. DI in practice
 
   * What are the technical issues, networking problems, and 
 relevant 
 ICT devices?
   * System design for the bottom of the pyramid of the digital divide
   * Do small communities benefit from ICT, or is it only 
 applicable on 
 a large (regional, national) scale?
   * How do the micro social groups (eg. households and families) 
 use 
 ICT for their business?
   * Evaluating separate and integrated business, government and 
 civil 
 society ICT solutions.
   * Issues of free access and sustainable access.
   * Business filling the gap in the absence of government 
 co-ordination of ICT practice.
   * When business practice and community expectation collide in 
 ICT, 
 who suffers?
   * Differences between individual access (such as OLPC, mobile 
 phones) and public access (telecentres, MPCCs).
   * Open source vs proprietary systems.
 
 
 4. Opportunities
 
   * The future of skills and literacy training, and professional 
 development, as part of ICT.
   * Opportunities for professional communities to contribute to ICT.
   * Eliciting expressions of local concern and building them into 
 ICT 
 programs.
   * Ensuring that external ICT solutions meet local needs.
   * Balancing short-term and long-term ICT solutions.
   * Universal access as a dream or reality?
   * What is the appropriate role of developed countries in 
 assisting 
 with ICT empowerment?
   * Adapting developed values and practices to suit ICT contexts.
   * Which community networking principles best assist with ICT?
   * Is it meaningful to consider the role of the 'international 
 community' in ICT?
   * Ongoing, universally-applicable measures of the effectiveness 
 of 
 ICT for empowerment.
   * Comparative studies of ICT for empowerment.
 
 
 
 Submission of abstracts and proposals
 
 
 Abstracts and proposals (not full papers) can only be submitted via 
 the 
 electronic registration system which will become available