roundtable: DIAC-94 Workshop Proposals Wanted!
roundtable: DIAC-94 Workshop Proposals Wanted!
DIAC-94 Workshop Proposals Wanted!
Doug Schuler (douglas@grace.rt.cs.boeing.com)
Wed, 9 Feb 94 13:21:08 PST
Date: Wed, 9 Feb 94 13:21:08 PST
From: Doug Schuler <douglas@grace.rt.cs.boeing.com>
Message-Id: <9402102121.AA06538@grace.rt.cs.boeing.com>
To: ROUNDTABLE@CNI.ORG
Subject: DIAC-94 Workshop Proposals Wanted!
I realize that this is somewhat late and I apologize profusely.
You may have seen the hardcopy version of this that Marc distributed.
We'd love to have you participate!
Let me know if you have any questions.
-- Doug
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Please post and distribute to interested colleagues.
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Call for Workshop Proposals
"Developing an Effective and Equitable Information Infrastructure"
Directions and Implications of Advanced Computing (DIAC-94) Symposium
Cambridge, MA, USA
April 23 - 24, 1994
The National Information Infrastructure (NII) is being proposed as the next-
generation "information superhighway" for the 90's and beyond. Academia,
libraries, government agencies, as well as media and telecommunication
companies are involved in the current development. Computer Professionals for
Social Responsibility (CPSR) and other organizations believe that critical
issues regarding the use of the NII deserve increased public visibility and
participation and is using the DIAC Symposium to help address this concern.
The DIAC-94 symposium is a two-day symposium and will consist of
presentations on the first day and workshops on the second day. The DIAC
Symposia are held biannually and DIAC-94 will be CPSR's fifth such
conference. We encourage your participation both through attending and
through conducting a workshop. We are currently soliciting workshop
proposals. We suggest proposals on the following themes but any topic
relating to the symposium theme is welcome.
Systems and Services Policy
+ Community networks + Funding
+ Information services + Role of government
+ Delivery of social services + Economic modeling of networks
+ Privacy (including medical) + Commercialization of the NII
+ Educational support + Universal access
+ Meeting diverse needs + Freedom of expression and
community standards
Electronic Democracy Directions and Implications
+ Access to information + Ubiquitous computing
+ Electronic town meetings + Global hypertext and multimedia
+ Threats to democracy + Computing in the workplace
+ Economic and class disparities + Computing and the environment
International Issues Traditional and Virtual Communities
+ Language differences + MUDs
+ Cultural diversity + Communication ethics, values, and styles
+ National and international + Gender relations in cyberspace
priorities
+ Cooperative projects + Networking for indigenous peoples
Workshops will be an hour and half in length. The proposal should include
title, presenter, purpose of workshop, references, and plan. Workshops
should substantially involve the audience and proposals in which some group
product or action plan is created are preferred. As the proposals may be
collected into a book, workshop proposals should be clear and informative to
people who don't participate in the workshop. Proposals are due February 15,
1994 and acceptance and rejection notices will be sent by March 15, 1994. To
discuss workshops, obtain a submission guide, or to submit proposals for
workshops contact the program chair, Doug Schuler, doug.schuler@cpsr.org.
Electronic submissions are encouraged but paper versions are also acceptable
(send them to CPSR/Seattle - DIAC '94 Workshop Submission, P.O. Box 85481,
Seattle, WA 98145-1481).
Sponsored by Computer Professionals for Social Responsbility
Co-sponsored by the Internet Society and the MIT Communications Forum.
Other co-sponsors are being sought. Please contact us if your
organization would like to help with this event. For more information on
co-sponsorship or on general issues, contact conference chair, Coralee
Whitcomb, cwhitcom@bentley.edu.