| Michael Gurstein on Mon, 4 Jun 2001 23:29:36 +0200 (CEST) | 
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| [Nettime-bold] CfP The Practice and Theory of Community Networks/Community Informatics | 
| 
 An Invitation for 
Proposals A Refereed Workshop and Research 
Track on The Practice and Theory 
 of  Community Networks/Community 
Informatics A Joint Presentation ofCommunity 
Network/Community Informatics Researchers and Community 
Networkers For Global CN 
2001 Buenos Aires, 
Argentina 
 Session 
coordinators: Michael Gurstein (Vancouver), Susana Finquelievich (Buenos Aires), 
Artur Serra (Barcelona). Workshop´s 
goals: 
 1) Encourage and 
strengthen exchange and co - operation between University and other researchers 
working with CN members world-wide  Proposals and 
papers for this workshop can be sent to:  propuestas@globalcn2001.org 
 Background: 
 Community 
Networking initiatives are being incubated, are in active social service and are 
growing in diverse geographic localities around the world. Global CN2001 follows 
along the path of Global CN2000 http://www.globalcn2000.org , the first 
international community networking conference, held late last year in 
Barcelona.   Buenos Aires, the 
2001 host city, will provide its cosmopolitan setting for a most important 
sharing of ideas about the diverse development of local and regional information 
societies in a rapidly changing networked global environment. 
 The “Research 
Studies on Community Networking/Community Informatics” session is being  organized to provide an academic – 
practitioner context and understanding of the practical work that lies ahead for 
the local sphere: Universities, government, the marketplace and civic 
organizations, and a better understanding of individual, and collective 
actions, information exchanges and knowledge building to support Community 
Networking.  Papers are 
currently being solicited that address the complex theoretical subject and 
practical applications of this conference session.  A few rhetorical 
questions meant to evoke possible responses include:  1. What are 
potential major trends in academic studies about CN? What are present and 
potential pro and con effects of joint studies on community networking that 
bring together Universities and CN members?  2. What is the 
outlook for community networking amid evolving economic, cultural, and 
social restructuring and values?  Will community networking become 
increasingly reinforced by joint work with Universities? Which successes and 
failures have been registered in this area? Do community networks offer 
potential opportunities for added value and vitality for academic groups / 
Universities?  3. How might 
Universities, through research, knowledge building, education, training, in 
tele-technologies and information exchange, have positive effects on Community 
Networks? Which are the conditions and changes (organizational, financial, etc) 
that Universities should overcome to introduce the new academic and research 
areas that are mentioned?  4. Might community 
networking initiatives serve as 'living laboratories' and examples for newly 
evolving and diverse local-global social and political processes? 
 5. - What is 
contemporary understanding of Academics and practitioners about the character 
of  "communities" in CNs? What are the new mechanisms that permit new forms 
of social integration (community) and how these forms are different from 
classical neighborhood proximity? What are the potentials and limits of 
generating "electronic community" in social contexts of poverty and inequality? 
 6. How can 
University - CN cooperation reinforce social and political power of marginalized 
communities in their struggle against social exclusion? How this cooperation may 
help to increase communicational power of CNs in squatter or under-privileged 
areas? What is the role of CNs (and universities) in major social 
transformations?  7. How universities 
can play an important role in detecting non-local potential of community 
articulations and can provide CNs with tools which permit access to 
worldwide informational and consulting resources (that's not only a "hardware 
problem")? How to understand local - global articulations of CNs and their 
potentials and threads for community's identity?  8. How can academic 
research and discourse disseminate a broader social and political recognition of 
CN's importance as a mean of democratizing societies? How can they put the 
necessity of empowering CNs onto the public agenda? How can public policy - in 
the national, regional and local level - stimulate and support local (or 
non-local) CN initiatives?  Submission 
Guidelines:  Please email paper 
abstracts of no more than 400 words by June 19. Abstracts for papers, digital 
media, and other forms of participation should not exceed 400 words (one page). 
They should include: the session title, presentation title, author's name, 
institution, address, telephone, e- mail and URL. They are to describe clearly 
the proposed presentation, paper or activity.  Please use Arial 11 
pt., at 1.5 space, page size A4.  Abstracts should be 
e-mailed to propuestas@globalcn2001.org, indicating the author's last name in 
the title of the message. The deadline for receipt of abstracts is June 19, 
2001.  The abstracts will 
be evaluated by the Working Groups' Coordinators, with the participation of 
selected researchers and activists in each field. The Congress Secretariat will 
communicate the results of the evaluation by August 31.  Languages: 
 Abstracts and 
papers may be written in any of the Global CN2001 Congress´  Timetable: 
 June 19: Deadline 
for receipt of abstracts.  Information: 
 For additional 
Congress information, write to the secretary of the Global   |