[Air-l] Surveillance & Society | News January 2003 (fwd)
Barry Wellman
wellman at chass.utoronto.ca
Sat Feb 1 13:26:33 PST 2003
fyi
Barry
___________________________________________________________________
Barry Wellman Professor of Sociology NetLab Director
wellman at chass.utoronto.ca http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman
Centre for Urban & Community Studies University of Toronto
455 Spadina Avenue Toronto Canada M5S 2G8 fax:+1-416-978-7162
*** Now Out: _The Internet in Everyday Life_ (Blackwell, 2002) ***
___________________________________________________________________
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 14:10:44 -0000
From: D F J Wood <D.F.J.Wood at newcastle.ac.uk>
To: Clive <c.norris at shef.ac.uk>, Steve Graham <s.d.n.graham at ncl.ac.uk>,
David Lyon <lyond at post.queensu.ca>, Kirstie Ball <k.s.ball at bham.ac.uk>
Subject: Surveillance & Society | News January 2003
Surveillance & Society | News
the international journal of surveillance studies January 2003
http://www.surveillance-and-society.org <http://www.surveillance-and-society.org>
Managing Editor: Dr David Wood, mailto:d.f.j.wood at ncl.ac.uk
1. New Issue Out Now
2. Calls for Papers for future issues
3. Submitting to Surveillance & Society
4. Resource Base
5. Provisional announcement of Surveillance & Society's first major conference
1. New Issue Out Now!
Issue 1(2) of Surveillance & Society is out now! Themed around 'Work', it features new work by Paul Thompson, Jeff Stanton and Kathryn Stam, Benjamin Goold, Kirstie Ball and more.
http://www.surveillance-and-society.org/journalv1i2.htm
2. Calls for Papers
Issue 1(3) - Foucault and Panopticism
There is still time to get your submissions in for our third issue on any aspect of the legacy of Michel Foucault for surveillance studies, the concept of 'panopticism' or Bentham's iconic 'Panopticon' . We welcome critiques, reviews, art and studies of surveillance which explicitly make use of or undermine Foucault's theories and approach, or which reconsider the legacy of the Panopticon.
Deadline for submissions: March 31st 2003, publication date: end June 2003.
NEW CALL! Issue 1(4) - Mobilities
Mobility has become a key theme across academic disciplines, and enabling, controlling and preventing mobility is one of the most important aspects of surveillance in the 21st Century. Surveillance & Society is calling for submissions on all aspects of surveillance and mobilities, for example: mobile communications technologies and global positioning systems; migration, borders and border control; transport; automated urban infrastructures; virtual mobility; and so on.
Deadline for submissions: June 30th 2003, publication date: end September 2003.
3. Submitting to Surveillance & Society
Surveillance & Society will always consider pieces on any aspect of surveillance for all issues, regardless of the main theme of the issue.
We welcome both conventional academic papers and artistic submissions (photographs, video, poetry, code-poetry, fiction, multi-media etc.), political and technical reviews, opinion pieces and more.
We encourage innovative approaches and can discuss any proposed submission.
For more details, see: http://www.surveillance-and-society/call.htm
4. Resource Base.
The long-awaited Surveillance & Society Resource Base for Surveillance Studies should start to be operational within the next few weeks, a bit at a time. Keep an eye out...
5. Provisional Announcement of Surveillance & Society's first major conference:
CCTV and Social control:
the politics and practice of videosurveillance - European and Global perspectives
A of a two day conference to be held at the Centre For Criminological Research, University of Sheffield in conjucntion with the Journal - Surveillance & Society <http://www.surveillance-and-society.org <http://www.surveillance-and-society.org/journalv1i2.htm> >
Thursday January 8th and Friday January 9th 2004
Although the UK has clearly the most developed public infrastructure of surveillance cameras in the world, in the wake of September 11th other countries are increasingly deploying cameras in a range of settings, including city centre streets, sporting venues, transport systems, schools, hospitals, to name but a few.
The aim of this conference is to explore the extent and diversity of CCTV deployment in different countries and institutional settings and to consider the social, political and legal issues that arise from the expansion of surveillance. Although the conference will have a particular European focus we would especially welcome contributions from researchers in North and South America, Australia, Africa and Asia. The conference aims to be truly inter-disciplinary and welcomes contributions from sociologists, anthropologists, geographers, criminologists, socio-legal scholars, historians, economists and social scientists researching video-surveillance
It is planned that all papers given at theconference will be considered for publication in a special edition of the web journal - Surveillance and Society. However, acceptance of a paper for the conference is not a guarantee of publication as all submissions will be subject to normal peer review procedures. The special edition will be jointly edited by Professor Clive Norris (University of Sheffield) and Dr Mike McCahill (University of Hull).
We particularly welcome papers on the following topics
* Theorising CCTV surveillance
* National trends in the growth of video-surveillance national/international perspectives
* Case studies of the impact of CCTV surveillance in different institutional settings/countries
* The effectiveness of CCTV as a crime prevention measure
* Video surveillance and social exclusion
* CCTV and the media
* CCTV and legal regulation
* The history of video surveillance
* The politics of resistance
* The contours of public acceptability of CCTV
* The new technologies of video surveillance
* CCTV and Civil liberties.
* Ethical issues in CCTV surveillance
The Conference Fee will be £110 (165) for the two days and £60 (90) for one day attendance. The fee will include refreshments and lunch, but not overnight accommodation and evening meals.
Information about the University of Sheffield can be found at http://www.shef.ac.uk/ <http://www.shef.ac.uk/>
Details of how to get to the University can be found at http://www.shef.ac.uk/travel/ <http://www.shef.ac.uk/travel/>
Maps of the university can be found at http://www.shef.ac.uk/travel/maps.html <http://www.shef.ac.uk/travel/maps.html>
Details about the city and hotels can be found at http://www.shef.ac.uk/city/ <http://www.shef.ac.uk/city/>
The most convenient airport is located at Manchester. Sheffield is one hour away by train. Details can be found at http://www.manchesterairport.co.uk/ <http://www.manchesterairport.co.uk/>
Flights to and from Manchester can be found at http://timetables.oag.com/man/ <http://timetables.oag.com/man/>
A conference web page will be up and running in April. 2003 and this will give further details of accommodation, travel arrangements and the conference.
The Conference fee is payable by 1st June 2003.
Register of interest.
For those who are interested in attending the conference please register your interest by sending an email to c.norris at sheffield.ac.uk <mailto:c.norris at sheffield.ac.uk> . By the 14th of March 2003 with the following information
* Name
* Country of residence
* Institutional affiliation
* Institutional address
* Telephone number
* Email address
* Proposed title/subject of paper
* If you merely are thinking of attending but do not want to give a paper please state this clearly
Conference Preparation Timetable
* March 14th Return of Register of Interest
* April 14th Submission of 200-300 word abstract
* April 30th Conference web page up and running
* June 1st Payment of Conference Fee
* October 1st Submission of papers 2003
* November 1st Final conference programme published on web.
* November 31st Papers available to delegates on members section of conference web page
* January 8/9th 2004 Conference.
* April 2004 - Publication of Special Issue of Surveillance and Society CCTV and Social Control - European and Global Perspectives.
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