Dear all:
 
We are excited to announce the call for papers for the first Mobile 
Communication Research Annual.  In conjunction with Transaction Publishers and 
a distinguished editorial board, we are requesting submissions in the area of 
"The Reconstruction of Space & Time through Mobile Communication Practices."
 
Rich Ling and Scott Campbell

Please excuse the cross listings.


 
The text of the call for papers is as follows: 



Call for papers 

Transaction books 
and their series on Mobile communication 
(under the general editorship of James E. Katz), 
is proud to announce:

The Mobile Communication Research Annual: 
Volume I, The Reconstruction of Space & Time through Mobile Communication 
Practices

Rich Ling and Scott Campbell (eds.)
We seek the best and most interesting examples of relevant scholarship for our 
first volume of a projected series on the topic of mobile communication 
research. 
The volume's theme will be "The Reconstruction of Space and Time through Mobile 
Communication Practices." The proliferation of wireless and mobile 
communication technologies gives rise to important changes in how people 
experience space and time. These changes may be seen in many realms of social 
life, such as the transformation of public into private space and vice versa, 
the blurring of lines demarcating work and personal life, and new patterns of 
coordination and social networks. Recent scholarship has tried to make sense of 
these changes in space and time. For example, Manuel Castells argues that 
advances in telecommunications have contributed to new spatio-temporal forms, 
which he describes as "the space of flows" and "timeless time." According to 
Castells, these new forms mark a shift in the importance of the meaning of a 
place to the patterns of the de-sequenced, networked interactions that occur in 
that place. The purpose of this special issue is to continue and deepen the 
dialog on how space and time change as a result of the lower threshold for 
interaction due to mobile communication technologies. 
Abstracts of 200 words describing the proposed papers are due by 17 March 2006 
with those accepted due in final form by 1 September 2006. Submissions may be 
in the form of empirical research studies or theory-building papers and should 
be 5 - 7000 words (in English). Papers are preferably new work but if material 
from other venues is available it will also be considered for publication.  
Send your abstract to either Rich Ling or Scott Campbell.
About the editors:
Rich Ling ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is a sociologist at Telenor's research institute 
located near Oslo, Norway and he has also been the Pohs visiting professor of 
communication studies at the University of Michigan. He is the author of the 
recently published book on the social consequences of mobile telephony entitled 
The Mobile Connection: The cell phone's impact on society and along with Per E. 
Pederson the editor of the book Mobile Communications: Renegotiation of the 
Social Sphere. He received his Ph.D. in sociology from the University of 
Colorado, Boulder in his native US. Upon completion of his doctorate, he taught 
at the University of Wyoming before coming to Norway on a Marshall Foundation 
grant. For the past ten years, he has worked at Telenor R&D and has been active 
in researching issues associated with new information communication technology 
and society with a particular focus on mobile telephony. He has led projects in 
Norway and participated in projects at the European level.
Scott Campbell ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is Assistant Professor and Pohs Fellow of 
Telecommunications in the Department of Communication Studies at the University 
of Michigan. His research explores the social implications of new media, with 
an emphasis on mobile communication practices. His recent studies have 
investigated cross-cultural trends, mobile phone use in social networks, and 
use of the technology in public settings. Scott's research has appeared / is 
forthcoming in Communication Monographs, Journal of Applied Communication 
Research, Communication Education, New Media & Society, Communication Research 
Reports, Qualitative Research Reports in Communication, and other scholarly 
venues. Prior to joining the University of Michigan in 2005, he worked in the 
US wireless industry, earned a Ph.D. from the University of Kansas, and spent 
three years teaching and conducting research at Hawaii Pacific University on 
the Hawaiian island of Oahu.
About the series editor:
James E. Katz is the director of the Center for Mobile Communication Studies at 
Rutgers University and author of Magic in the Air (Transaction, 2006). His 
edited or co-edited books include Perpetual Contact (with Mark Aakhus), 
Machines that Become Us, and Mediating the Human Body (with Leopoldina 
Fortunati and Raimonda Riccini). His next edited book, tentatively titled 
Mainstreaming mobiles: Wireless Communication and Social Change in a Global 
Context, will be published by MIT Press.
About the publisher:
Transaction Publishers, a leading independent publisher of social scientific 
books, periodicals and serials, is undertaking a new series of books on mobile 
communication. Transaction's mission is scholarly and professional inquiry into 
the nature of society. Located on the campus of Rutgers University in 
Piscataway, New Jersey, Transaction Publishers is dedicated to the expansion of 
the social sciences and is committed to the enhancement of public, professional 
and scholarly awareness by reaching the widest possible audience for work done 
by researchers. http://www.transactionpub.com/
Editorial board
Ken Anderson            Intel corporation, US
Naomi Baron             American University, US
Manual Castells         Annenberg Center, University of Southern California, 
US/Spain
Akiba Cohen             Tel Aviv University, Israel
Nicola Doering          Ilmenau University of technology, Germany
Jonathan Donner         Microsoft Research - Bangalore, India/US
Gerard Goggin           University of Sydney, Australia
Nicola Green            University of Surrey, UK
Leslie Haddon           University of Essex, UK
Keith Hampton           Annenberg School, University of Pennsylvania, US
Joachim Höflich                 Erfurt University, Germany
Mizuko Ito              Annenberg Center, University of Southern California, 
US/Japan
Shin Dong Kim           Hallym University, Republic of Korea
Ilpo Koskinen           University of Art and Design, Helsinki, Finland
Patrick Law             The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
Christian Licoppe       Ecole Nationale Superieure des Telecommunications, 
France
Sonia Livingstone       London School of Economics, UK
Steve Love              Brunel University, UK
Kristóf Nyíri           Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary
Leysia Palen            University of Colorado, US
Raul Pertierra          University of the Philippines, Philippines
Madanmohan Rao  Indian Institute of Information Technology, Bangalore, India
Anxo Roibas             University of Brighton, UK/Italy
Harmeet Sawhney         Indiana University, US
Gitte Stald             University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Hidenori Tomita                 Bukkyo University, Japan
Jane Vincent            University of Surrey, UK
Barry Wellman           University of Toronto, Canada
Peter B. White          La Trobe University, Australia



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