SUBMISSIONS ARE NOW CLOSED!
Conference Registrations are now open!
We invite the submission of abstracts under the following themes. Submissions CAN ONLY be made via the Conftool database. At this time, only put your abstract in the text box. Do not upload papers.
Have changes in technology and people's relationships to technology over the years (from computers to mobile devices, from text to multimedia, the increased simplicity of posting content), disputes over platforms and data ownership, privacy and control and speech issues provided more or less opportunity for individuals and communities (that's a lot, but we hope you get the point)?
Is there such a thing as a people's technology?
What of the dark side?
Class, gender/s, race/ethnicity, language/s, power. What has or hasn't changed?
Environmental informatics: what is it to you?
Are we more or less enabled or constrained as individuals or communities locally or globally? Or is it something else? What can your work tell us?
How does society (or the group you work with) view technology at this time? Is it different to what it was before (before what?) or what are its expectations?
We also welcome contributions on any other topic of interest in community informatics
We also invited research students in the broad domain of community informatics to make submissions to the PhD stream.
Submissions CAN ONLY be made via the Conftool database. If you don't have an account, you will need to set up an account. At this time, only put your abstract in the text box. Do not upload papers.
Traditional papers full papers (7-10,000 words)
Peer-reviewed / refereed
Non peer-reviewed / non-refereed
Short-papers, presentations, posters, or installations, 3000 words limit /websites/media
PhD paper ( best paper award) 3000 word limit and/or PowerPoint/media presentations.
Completed works and works in progress
Proposals for workshops/panels with a facilitator/chair.
If you are writing a paper, it should be formatted according to the formatting instructions in the guide
Please pay attention to key dates.
30 May 2022 Call closes/notification to follow.
By 30 July 2022 - confirm your participation
15 September 2022 - full papers for refereed track due.
30 September 2022 - referee reports due
mid-October 2022 - resubmitted papers due
15 September 2022 - all other papers and submissions
9-11 November 2022-
Early 2023 - conference proceedings available
2023 Special issue of the Journal of Community Informatics.
Thus far, the following workshops are proposed and if you believe you can make a contribution, please submit a proposal for another for consideration:
2003- 2022 @ Prato: A panel with participants across the years. What has been, and where things are going? What have those hundreds of hours together and countless papers and presentations meant?
Workshop: Environmental informatics and its relationship to policy and practice in the North and Global South . Significant environmental actions and decisions are now made at different levels through generating environmental and ecological data and this continues in the (postCOVID)-19 era. This is particularly important in the international development context, but in developing countries as well. What is the relationship with the community informatics agenda?
Co-writing a new platform statement for community informatics, for adoption in difference policy settings, taking into account a recognition of now forms of diversity that was not well-accounted for in the past.
#cirn2022