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John Armitage: (ann, conf) Exploring Cyber Society |
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - <nettime-l-temp@material.net> is the temporary home of the nettime-l list while desk.nl rebuilds its list-serving machine. please continue to send messages to <nettime-l@desk.nl> and your commands to <majordomo@desk.nl>. nettime-l-temp should be active for approximately 2 weeks (11-28 Jun 99). - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: John Armitage <john.armitage@unn.ac.uk> To: "'nettime-l@desk.nl'" <nettime-l@desk.nl> Subject: EXPLORING CYBER SOCIETY Date: Mon, 28 Jun 1999 17:05:22 +0100 Hi Nettimers Please find below the Provisional Conference Programme for EXPLORING CYBER SOCIETY, an International Conference to be held next week in Newcastle upon Tyne, UK. Any questions, queries, please feel free to email me. PLEASE CIRCULATE THIS MESSAGE. best wishes John Armitage ================================================================== 5th -7th July 1999 School of Social, Political and Economic Sciences University of Northumbria at Newcastle Organising Committee John Armitage James Dearnley Philip Garrahan Lorna Kennedy Kevin McLoughlin Joanne Roberts MONDAY 5th JULY 09.00-11.00 Registration: Drill Hall 11.00-11.30 Introductory welcome: Professor Gilbert Smith, Vice-Chancellor, University of Northumbria: Drill Hall Main Lecture Theatre. Chair: Professor Philip Garrahan 11.30-12.00 Coffee: Drill Hall Foyer 12.00-13.15 Plenary Session 1 Keynote Speaker: Professor Kevin Robins, Spaces We Live In Drill Hall Main Lecture Theatre. Chair: John Armitage 13.15-14.30 Lunch: Claude Gibb Dining Room 14.30-16.00 Paper Session 1 16.00-17.30 Paper Session 2 17.30-18.00 Coffee: Drill Hall Foyer 18.00-19.15 Plenary Session 2 Keynote Speaker: Professor Cynthia Alexander, Lost in Space? Canadian Women and Aboriginal People in a Wired World. Drill Hall Main Lecture Theatre. Chair: Professor Mary Mellor 20.00 Dinner: Claude Gibb Dining Room TUESDAY 6th JULY 8.00-9.00 Breakfast: Claude Gibb Dining Room 9.00-9.15 Notices: Drill Hall Foyer 9.15-10.30 Plenary Session 3 Keynote Speaker: Professor Frank Webster, Virtual Society: The Limits to Choice. Drill Hall Main Lecture Theatre. Chair: Professor Philip Garrahan 10.30-11.00 Coffee: Drill Hall Foyer 11.00-12.30 Paper Session 3 12.30-13.30 Lunch: Claude Gibb Dining Room 13.30-15.00 Paper Session 4 15.00-16.15 Plenary Session 4. Keynote Speaker: Professor James Der Derian, The Virtual Condition: On, Between and After War. Drill Hall Main Lecture Theatre. Chair: Professor David Campbell 16.15-16.45 Coffee: Drill Hall Foyer 16.45-18.15 Paper Session 5 18.15-19.15 Virtual Performance. Mary Flanagan, The Perpetual Bed. Drill Hall Main Lecture Theatre 19.45 Conference Dinner, Newcastle Civic Centre WEDNESDAY 7th JULY 8.00-9.00 Breakfast: Claude Gibb Dining Room 9.00-9.15 Notices: Drill Hall Foyer 9.15-10.30 Plenary Session 5. Keynote Speaker: Professor Ian Miles, Cyber Society: A New Economics of Innovation? Drill Hall Main Lecture Theatre. Chair: Joanne Roberts 10.30-11.00 Coffee: Drill Hall Foyer 11.00-12.30 Paper Session 6 12.30-13.30 Lunch: Claude Gibb Dining Room 13.30-15.00 Paper Session 7 15.00-16.15 Plenary Session 6 Keynote Speaker: Keynote Speaker: Professor William Dutton, Pure Technology? Digital Government and Cyberdemocracy Drill Hall Main Lecture Theatre. Chair: TBA 16.15-17.15 Coffee & Closing Comments. Drill Hall Main Lecture Theatre Paper Streams Cyber Society : Convenor: Kevin McLoughlin Session 1: Monday 5th 14.30-16.00 Chair: Mary Mellor Room: Northumberland Building 002 Karen Evans, Into the Black Holes - Social Exclusion and the Information Society Gland Carriere, Forays Into Cyberspace: The Establishment of Electronic Communications by a Non-Profit Women's Organisation Session 2: Monday 5th 16.00-17.30 Chair: Kevin McLoughlin Room: Northumberland Building 002 Leeds Animation Workshop Film Presentation and Discussion: Did I Say Hairdressing? I Meant Astrophysics Session 3: Tuesday 6th 11.00-12.30 Chair: Alan Dordoy Room: Northumberland Building 002 Christoph Mueller, Networks of 'Personal Communities' and 'Group Communities' in Different Online Communication Services Andrea Baker, Relationships in Everyday Life Online: Finding Love in Cyberspace Maria Bakardjieva & Richard Smith, The Internet in Everyday Life: Computer Networking from the Standpoint of the Domestic User Session 4: Tuesday 13.30-15.00 Chair: Austin McCarthy Room: Drill Hall, Main Lecture Theatre Christopher Brien, The Death of Distance: Teaching Online at an Australian University Martin Harris, New Labour New Media: Virtual Learning and the University for Industry Session 5: Tuesday 6th 16.45-18.15 Chair: John Goddard Room: Northumberland Building 007 Neil Pollock, The Virtual University as 'Timely and Accurate' Information Sheila French & Helen Richardson, Gender and the Cyber Classroom Session 6: Wednesday 7th 11.00-12.30 Chair: Alan Dordoy Room: Drill Hall, Main Lecture Theatre Maureen Stephenson, Grey Colonisation of Cyberspace Miranda Mowbray, Differences in the Use of a Cyber Community According to Habitual Time of Connection and Presenting Gender Patrice Renaud & Mario Poirier, Structures and Instabilities in the Emergence of a Cyber Community Session 7: Wednesday 7th 13.30-15.00 Chair: Kevin McLoughlin Room: Northumberland Building 002 Valerie Walkerdine & Angela Dudfield, Children and Cyberspace: Childhood and Computer Games at the End of the Millennium Shehina Fazal, More Than Just Consumers: New Media and Shifting Boundaries of Childhood and Adulthood in Cyber Society Cyber Society & Politics: Convenor: Philip Garrahan Session 1: Monday 5th 14.30-1600 Chair: Philip Garrahan Room: Drill Hall, Main Lecture Theatre Joanne Britton, Fiona Devine, Rosmary Mellor & Peter Halfpenny, The Potential for Home-Working in the Information Age: Case Studies from Manchester's Financial and Business services Sabine Pfeiffer, Ignored and Neglected: Work in Cybersociety Session 2: Monday 5th 16.00-17.30 Chair: Rosie Cunningham Room: Drill Hall, Main Lecture Theatre Debra Howcroft & Francis Wilson, World-Wide Culture? An Empirical Study of Internet Adoption and Diffusion in Japan Louise Amoore, Disembedded Technology? Globalisation, Knowledge and Social Change Session 3: Tuesday 6th 11.00-12.30 Chair: Louise Amoore Room: Northumberland Building 007 Jon Warren, Consumers in Cyberspace [Barbara A. Crow, Digital Technology, Corporate Appropriation and Identity Politics] Session 4: Tuesday 6th 13.30-15.00 Chair: John Fenwick Room: Northumberland Building 002 Tony Fitzpatrick, Critical Cyber Policy: Network Technologies, Massless Citizens, Virtual Rights Justo Carracedo-Gallardo & Jose-David Carracedo, Use of Security Protocols for Privacy and Anonymity Protection in the Internet Communications Session 5: Tuesday 6th 16.45-18.15 Chair: Rosie Cunningham Room: Northumberland Building 006 Lee Komito, Political Transformations, Clientelism and Technology Change Paul G. Nixon & Hans S.H. Johansson, Political Parties and the Internet in the European Parliament Elections Session 6: Wednesday 7th 11.00-12.30 Chair: Andrew Hindley Room: Northumberland Building 002 Leah A. Lievrouw, Cyber Separatism: ICTs, Heterotopic Communication and Information Environments Robin B. Hamman, Computer Networks Linking Network Communities: Effects of AOL Use Upon Pre-existing Communities Session 7: Wednesday 7th 13.00-15.00 Chair: Philip Garrahan Room: Northumberland Building 007 Kate Robson & Mark Robson, Your Place or Mine? Ethics, the Researcher and the Internet [Katie J. Ward, Cyber Ethnography as Reflexive Methodology] Bella Dicks & Bruce Mason, Cyber Ethnography and the Digital Researcher Cyber Politics & Policy: Convenor: James Dearnley Session 1: Monday 5th 14.30-16.00 Chair: James Dearnley Room: Northumberland Building 007 Anders Henten & Thomas Myrup Kristensen, Information Society Visions in the Nordic Countries Ashraf Patel, ICT Policy and Practise in South Africa: The Multipurpose Community Information Centre Experience Session 2: Monday 5th 16.00-17.30 Chair: Lynn Dobbs Room: Northumberland Building 007 Frans A.J. Birrer, Cyber Society and Democratic Quality Lincoln Dahlberg, The Internet and Electronic Democracy: Exploring Three Alternatives Session 3: Tuesday 6th 11.00-12.30 Chair: Peter Francis Room: Drill Hall, Main Lecture Theatre Lynne Hall & Carlisle E. George, Law and Punishment in Virtual Communities Tomas A. Lipinski, The New Wolf in Sheep's Clothing: A Legal Critique on Internet Content Regulation in Public Spaces Session 4: Tuesday 6th 13.30-15.00 Chair: Peter Francis Room: Northumberland Building 007 Jose-David Carracedo, To What Extent is the Scheme of Panopticism Useful in the Age of Global Electronic Communications to Make Sense of the Concept of Power and Surveillance? C. William R. Webster, Cyber Society or Surveillance Society? Findings from a National Survey on Closed Circuit Television in the UK Session 5: Tuesday 6th 16.45-18.15 Chair: Louise Amoore Room: Northumberland Building 002 John Hudson, Rational Actors, Sub-Rational Organisation Lynn Dobbs & Rosie Cunningham, Smooth Operators: Examining the Role of ICTs in the National Health Service Collette Snowden, Hello! The Future is Wireless Session 6: Wednesday 7th 11.00-12.30 Chair: Lynn Dobbs Room: Northumberland Building 007 Georg Aichholzer & Rupert Schmutzer, Options, Policy Issues, and Implementation of Electronic Government Services [Paul M.A. Baker, Governance, Policy and Wires] Session 7: Wednesday 7th 13.30-15.00 Chair: James Dearnley Room: Drill Hall, Main Lecture Theatre Tim Jordan, Cyberpower: The Culture and Politics of Cyberspace Christopher May, Network Myths? Lewis Mumford and the Technologies of Information Society Alistair Irons, 'Cyberwar' and Society Cyber Economics: Convenor: Joanne Roberts Session 1: Monday 5th 14.30-16.00 Chair: Joanne Roberts Room: Northumberland Building 006 Simon Rogerson, Paul Foley & Chanaka Jayawardhena, Is Electronic Commerce a Socially Beneficial Activity? [George Gantzias & Howard Tumber, E-Commerce and Regulation] Session 2: Monday 5th 16.00-17.30 Chair: TBA Room: Northumberland Building 006 Anita Borch, Deconstructing the Internet-market - a Critical Consumer Perspective Barbara Jones & Bob Miller, The Remodelling of Individual Preferences and Choices 'in Cyberspace' Session 3: Tuesday 6th 11.00-12.30 Chair: Kevin Hinde Room: Northumberland Building 011 Greg Hearn & David Rooney, The Role of Communication in the Knowledge Economy Joanne Roberts, From Know-how to Show-how? Questioning the Role of ICTs in Knowledge Transfer Session 4: Tuesday 6th 13.30-15.00 Chair: Kevin Hinde Room: Northumberland Building 006 Richard Naylor & James Cornford, Computer and Video Games: The First New Cultural Industry of the Digital Age? Mark Samuels, Contemporary Retail Employment Geography: A Presentation of Segmented Worker Activities Session 5: Tuesday 6th 16.45-18.15 Chair: James Cornford Room: Northumberland Building 011 Richard Barbrook, The Hi-Tech Gift Economy Hillary Bays, The Gift Economy in Internet Chat - Giving Immaterial and "Material" Gifts Session 6: Wednesday 7th 11.00-12.30 Chair: TBA Room: Northumberland Building 011 David R. Smith, Bcnet: The Emergence of the Internet in an Urban Area: A Tale of Possibilities Lost and Found [Matthew David, Lost in Cider Space] B.M. Chivhanga, Living It Out - The Internet in Africa Session 7: Wednesday 7th 13.30-15.00 Chair: Joanne Roberts Room: Northumberland Building 006 Chris Werry, Imagined Electronic Community: Representations of Virtual Community in Contemporary Business Discourse Philip Graham, Hypercapitalism: Political Economy, Electric Identity, and Authorial Alienation Paula M. Tidwell & Eric Sim, Determining Entry Strategies for Global Markets: An Eclectic Approach Using ANNs Cyber Culture: Convenor: John Armitage Session 1: Monday 5th 14.30-16.00 Chair: John Armitage Room: Northumberland Building 011 Maren Hartmann, Surfer, Netizen, Cyberflaneur, Webgrrl: Online User Metaphors In Use Tatiana Rapatzikou, Contemporary Gothic Visualisations in William Gibson's Cyber Trilogy and the Art of the Graphic Novel Session 2: Monday 5th 16.00-17.30 Chair: Mike Gane Room: Northumberland Building 011 Niels Brugger, Body, Technology and Media, With Mauss, McLuhan and Virilio as Guides Anna Croon, Making Sense of Cyberspace - A Question of Being - With Information Technology David Kreps, Cyborg Bodies: From Postmodern to Posthuman Liminal Habitats Session 3: Tuesday 6th 11.00- 12.30 Chair: John Armitage Room: Northumberland Building 006 Mike Gane, Bathos of Technology and Politics in Fourth Order Simulacra Richard Barbrook, The Holy Fools Session 4: Tuesday 6th 13.30-15.00 Chair: Mark Little Room: Northumberland Building 011 Mary Flanagan, Navigable Narratives: Gender and Narrative Spatiality in Virtual Worlds Jyanni Steffensen, Brodsky, Economics and the Jewish Science or How to Finance Time Travel Analysis through the Production of Virtual Vibrators Session 5: Tuesday 6th 16.45-18.15 Chair: Mike Gane Room: Drill Hall (not Northumberland) 011 Dale Bradley, The Rhizotope Terry Harpold & Kavita Philip, Of Bugs and Rats: Cyber-cleanliness, Cyber-squalor, and the Fantasies of Globalization Doug Stuart & Nira Yuval-Davis, Homelands, Landscapes and the Construction of Collectivities: Imaginary Geographies and the Internet Session 6: Wednesday 7th 11.00-12.30 Chair: Mark Little Room: Northumberland Building 006 Lindsay Barrett & Marion Benjamin, The Aesthetics and Politics of New Media Practices Charlie Gere, The Systemic Sublime Session 7: Wednesday 7th 13.30-15.00 Chair: John Armitage Room: Northumberland Building 011 Panagiota Alevizou, New Media and Cybergenres: The Case of Encyclopedias Online and the Methodological Challenges for Analysing the 'New' in Digital Media Sam Lehman-Wilzig, The Tower of Babel vs. The Power of Babble: Future Political, Economic & Cultural Consequences of Simultaneous, Automated Translation Systems (SATS) __________________________________ "The military is the message" John.Armitage@unn.ac.uk j.armitage@technologica.demon.co.uk Division of Government & Politics University of Northumbria Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 8ST UK Tel: 0191 227 3943 Fax: 0191 227 4654 __________________________________