کل

Conference on the Global Status of Women and Girls

Conference on the Global Status of Women and Girls
March 3-5, 2016
Newport News, Virginia, United States of America


Christopher Newport University To Host International Conference on the Global Status of Women and Girls

Christopher Newport University’s College of Arts and Humanities will present a “Global Status of Women and Girls” conference, March 3-5, 2016. This international, interdisciplinary conference seeks to foster inquiries into the complex and multifocal issues faced by women and girls around the world, both historically and today, seeking not only to clarify key questions that must be asked in this vital area of public policy but also to unearth the forces that created these current dilemmas. The conference keynote speaker is Pulitzer Prize-winning Journalist Sheryl Wu Dunn.The conference will also feature a screening of the film He Named Me Malala, an intimate portrait of Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Malala Yousafzai.

Christopher Newport University invites scholars from all academic disciplines to submit proposals addressing the political, social, economic, psychological, developmental, educational, literary, artistic, philosophical, religious, ethical and health issues of women and girls. Submissions from any academic discipline – including but not limited to history, philosophy, religious studies, sociology, psychology, chemistry, environmental science, medicine, biomedical ethics, economics, political science, gender studies, communication studies and literature – are welcome.

Professionals in both academic and nonacademic settings are encouraged to submit proposals. Topics to be covered may include, but are not limited to: the feminization of poverty; wage inequality; women in the workplace; child marriage; war and women; human trafficking; environmental change and the economic status of women; religion and the status of women; girls and education; sexual assault/rape; and disability and accessibility, among others.

Abstracts of 350-500 words may be submitted by November 1, 2015. All submissions will be peer reviewed, and those accepted will be notified no later than January 1, 2016. The top 25 papers will be included in a peer-reviewed proceedings publication.

Additional information regarding the Global Status of Women and Girls conference can be found at http://globalstatusofwomen-conf.org/

Inquiries: آدرس ایمیل جهت جلوگیری از رباتهای هرزنامه محافظت شده اند، جهت مشاهده آنها شما نیاز به فعال ساختن جاوا اسكریپت دارید

 

11th Global Meeting of the Health project

Storytelling, Illness and Medicine
11th Global Meeting of the Health project


Call for Presentations 2016

Monday 14th March – Wednesday 16th March 2016
Budapest, Hungary


Telling stories help us wrestle with and make sense of the things which happen in our lives. When illness or disease emerge and disrupt our everyday lives, stories play a key role by which we attempt to create meaning in relation to what is happening to us. They also invite others to share and engage in the way we see ourselves during such times, create spaces for sympathy, empathy and compassion and encourage people to share in the process of making sense of health, illness and disease with us. When it comes to medicine and clinical practice, the stories people tell become the first point of contact between sufferer and doctor and beyond that, between patient, doctor, consultant and even surgeon.

This inclusive interdisciplinary research stream aims to explore the processes by which we attempt to use stories and narratives to create meaning in health, illness and disease. The project will also examine the myths, the models, the metaphors we use to understand our experiences of health and illness and to evaluate the diversity of ways in which we creatively struggle to make sense of such experiences and express ourselves across a range of media. In the process it will map and evaluate the storied experience of illness between persons, patients, care-givers, practitioners and medical professionals, the impact of stories on care and the delivery of care, medical literacy, and stories shared at the level of health care professionals, the pharmaceutical industry and education.

Presentations, informal talks, performances, workshops, directed discussions, screenings and other types of interactive engagement might address themes such as:

- stories and the ‘significance’ of health, illness and disease for individuals and communities; the factors which influence our perceptions of health and illness experiences

- the concept of the ‘well’ person and the preoccupation with health; the attitudes of the ‘well’ to the ‘ill’; perceptions of ‘impairment’ and disability and the challenges posed when confronted by illness and disease; the notion of being ‘cured’; chronic illness; terminal illness; and, attitudes to death

- story-telling as an individual and community experience; stories that we weave to make meaning of our condition; how we perceive, present and conduct our self through experiences of health and illness; effects on our sense of identity; our relationship with our own body; and, how others – family, friends, partners, strangers, doctors, nurses, and care givers – see us

- stories, persons and bodies; the body in health or pain; the body on display; disabled bodies; damaged bodies; amputated bodies; the body as machine and the role of technology; the rise of genetics; manipulation of the body – transplantation, surgery; the body as resource; ‘artificial’ bodies; and the potential influences of gender, ethnicity, and class

- competing stories; biological and medical narratives of illness; ‘alternative’ medicine and therapies; the doctor-patient relationship; the ‘clinical gaze’; the impact of health, illness and disease on public narratives of biology, economics, government, medicine, politics, social sciences; the changing stories in the relationship between society and medical development; health care, service providers, and public policy

- the nature and role of ‘metaphors’ in expressing the experiences of health, illness and disease – for example, illness as ‘another country’; the role of narrative and narrative interpretation in making sense of the ‘journey’ from health through illness, diagnosis, and treatment; the importance of story telling; dealing with chronic and terminal illness; the ‘myths’ surrounding health, illness and disease

- the relationship between creative work, illness and disease: the work of artists, musicians, poets, writers. Illness and the literary imagination – studies of writers and literature which take health, disability, illness and disease as a central theme

- tales from the inside; stories and the patient; the therapeutic relational, meaningful encounters, assessments, and interventions; the institution, the service and the individual

- professional stories and reflective practice; co-constructing meaning developing practice

- working with stories; how to listen, to hear and to respond

- life beyond illness; acknowledging stories that transform; sacred and heroic journeys; quests and survivor missions

Further details and information can be found at the conference website:
http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/probing-the-boundaries/health/research-streams/storytelling-illness-and-medicine/call-for-presentations/

Call for Cross-Over Presentations
The Storytelling, Illness and Medicine project will be meeting at the same time as a project on Fairy Tales and another project on Happiness. We welcome submissions which cross the divide between both project areas. If you would like to be considered for a cross project session, please mark your submission “Crossover Submission”.

What to Send
300 word abstracts, proposals and other forms of contribution should be submitted by Friday 4th December 2015.
All submissions be minimally double reviewed, under anonymous (blind) conditions, by a global panel drawn from members of the Project Team and the Advisory Board. In practice our procedures usually entail that by the time a proposal is accepted, it will have been triple and quadruple reviewed.

You will be notified of the panel’s decision by Wednesday 16th December 2015.
If your submission is accepted for the conference, a full draft of your contribution should be submitted by Friday 12th February 2016.

Abstracts may be in Word, RTF or Notepad formats with the following information and in this order:

a) author(s), b) affiliation as you would like it to appear in programme, c) email address, d) title of proposal, e) body of proposal, f) up to 10 keywords.
E-mails should be entitled: Storytelling, Illness and Medicine Abstract Submission

Where to Send
Abstracts should be submitted simultaneously to both Organising Chairs:

Organising Chairs:
Peter Bray: آدرس ایمیل جهت جلوگیری از رباتهای هرزنامه محافظت شده اند، جهت مشاهده آنها شما نیاز به فعال ساختن جاوا اسكریپت دارید
Rob Fisher: آدرس ایمیل جهت جلوگیری از رباتهای هرزنامه محافظت شده اند، جهت مشاهده آنها شما نیاز به فعال ساختن جاوا اسكریپت دارید

This event is an inclusive interdisciplinary research and publishing project. It aims to bring together people from different areas and interests to share ideas and explore various discussions which are innovative and exciting.

All papers accepted for and presented at the conference must be in English and will be eligible for publication in an ISBN eBook. Selected papers may be developed for publication in a themed hard copy volume(s). All publications from the conference will require editors, to be chosen from interested delegates from the conference.

Ethos
Inter-Disciplinary.Net believes it is a mark of personal courtesy and professional respect to your colleagues that all delegates should attend for the full duration of the meeting. If you are unable to make this commitment, please do not submit an abstract for presentation.

Please note: Inter-Disciplinary.Net is a not-for-profit network and we are not in a position to be able to assist with conference travel or subsistence.

 

35th International Conference on Organizational Science Development

35th International Conference on Organizational Science Development
16th to 18th March 2016
Portoroz, Slovenia


The 35th International Conference on Organizational Science Development is titled »Sustainable Organization«. It is the conference with the longest tradition at the University of Maribor, Slovenia. It will be held in Portoroz on the Slovene coast.

Enquiries: آدرس ایمیل جهت جلوگیری از رباتهای هرزنامه محافظت شده اند، جهت مشاهده آنها شما نیاز به فعال ساختن جاوا اسكریپت دارید
Web address: http://fov.uni-mb.si/conference/
Sponsored by: University of Maribor, Faculty of Organizational Sciences, Slovenia

Important dates

November 16, 2015
Abstract submission

November 23, 2015
Abstract acceptance notification

January 10, 2016
Full paper submission

February 01, 2016
Results of the review process

February 10, 2016
Final full paper submission

February 29, 2016
Early bird registration closes

 

IEEE International Conference on Big Data Analysis

2016 IEEE International Conference on Big Data Analysis (ICBDA 2016) - Ei Compendex

Hangzhou, China

After a careful reviewing process, all accepted papers after proper registration and presentation, will be published in the ICBDA 2016 conference Proceedings, and reviewed by the IEEE Conference Publication Program for IEEE Xplore and Ei Compendex.

Enquiries: آدرس ایمیل جهت جلوگیری از رباتهای هرزنامه محافظت شده اند، جهت مشاهده آنها شما نیاز به فعال ساختن جاوا اسكریپت دارید
Web address: http://www.icbda.org/
Sponsored by: IEEE

 

international conference Rethinking Remoteness and Peripherality

REMOTE: Rethinking Remoteness and Peripherality
16-19 January 2017, Longyearbyen, Norway
http://www.islanddynamics.org/remote.html

This international conference explores the concepts of remoteness and peripherality. These concepts are used in numerous disciplines, including geography, development studies, anthropology, spatial planning, and cultural studies. But what do remoteness and peripherality mean in practice, from the perspectives of the people and places deemed to be remote and peripheral? ‘Remote’ and ‘peripheral’ presume a centring of (potentially colonial) power elsewhere and tend to be defined in terms of accessibility to major urban areas.

Are remoteness and peripherality essentially relative concepts, only comprehensible with reference to the near and the central? Can remoteness and peripherality ever be experienced internally, or are they simply projections from the outside? If political, economic, and social power rest with the big cities and centres, is it fruitful or is it damaging to cast some communities as remote and peripheral? Notions of ‘remote’ and ‘peripheral' connote economic stagnation, decay, and underdevelopment (or absence of development) and are associated with a lack of connectivity, indicating a local state of de-globalization. And yet ‘remote’ is not univocal. Might it be possible to reclaim remoteness and peripherality as drivers of societal creativity, innovation, and resilience?

About Longyearbyen, Svalbard.
Longyearbyen (population 2200) is the world’s northernmost town, the main settlement on Norway’s vast, largely ice-covered Svalbard archipelago. The polar night, when the sun never rises above the horizon, lasts from late October until mid-February. Most residents stay for only a season or a few years, and even those who do remain must eventually return to their homelands. Longyearbyen is iconically remote and peripheral, but the town is also highly cosmopolitan, hosting residents from over 40 nations, an active cultural life, and an economy based on tourism and mining activities. The community is young, close-knit, and diverse. Longyearbyen is thus the perfect place to explore the contradictions and paradoxes of remoteness and peripherality.

During the conference, participants will have the opportunity to travel to a glacier by dog sled and enter the mysterious realm of an ice cave. We will also explore Longyearbyen’s community, speaking with representatives from government, local businesses, and cultural organisations. Conference presentations will take place on 18-19 January at the Radisson Blu Polar Hotel Spitsbergen.

How to make a presentation.
Conference presentations will concern all aspects of remoteness and peripherality. The conference is open to researchers, policymakers, NGO representatives, and community representatives from around the globe. You are also welcome to attend the conference without giving a presentation. The deadline for abstracts is 30 April 2016, but to ensure that you have the opportunity to take part in the conference and have the time to seek funding from your institution or government, we recommend that you submit your abstract early. You can submit an abstract here: http://www.islanddynamics.org/remote/cfp.html.

Enquiries: آدرس ایمیل جهت جلوگیری از رباتهای هرزنامه محافظت شده اند، جهت مشاهده آنها شما نیاز به فعال ساختن جاوا اسكریپت دارید
Sponsored by: Island Dynamics and International Development & International Studies (RMIT University)

 
مطالب بیشتر...

کانال تلگرام ایران کنفرانس

اخبار دانشگاهی ( هیات علمی ، دکتری ، کارشناسی ارشد )
اخبار کنفرانس ،کارگاه ،جشنواره
همايشهاي خارجي
مقالات و مطالب علمی و آموزشی
بورس های تحصیلی و کارآموزی

سامانه مدیریت کنفرانس سامان

ورود جهت ثبت همايش
ایجاد حساب کاربری فقط جهت ثبت همايش می باشد. ثبت همایش های دانشگاهی رایگان و سایر همایش های دولتی و خصوصی شامل تعرفه خواهد بود. قبل از ثبت نام " قوانین " ثبت همایش را حتما ملاحظه فرمایید.



راهنمای مقاله نویسی

دانلود سرقصل های رشته های دکتری در سایت ایران کنفرانس

دانلود سرقصل های رشته های کارشناسی ارشد در سایت ایران کنفرانس

ایران کنفرانس:سایت برگزیده چهارمین جشنواره وب ایران

1390-1403© : ایران کنفرانس