This should be a great event. The Mobile City have been asked into the scientific committee.
The HYBRID CITY II: Subtle rEvolutions
Conference, workshops, exhibition and parallel events
23-25 May 2013
National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
Hybrid City is an international biennial event dedicated to exploring the emergent character of the city and the potential transformative shift of the urban condition, as a result of ongoing developments in information and communication technologies (ICTs) and of their integration in the urban physical context. After the successful homonymous symposium in 2011, the second edition of Hybrid City has grown into a peer reviewed conference, aiming to promote dialogue and knowledge exchange among experts drawn from academia, as well as artists, designers, researchers, advocates, stakeholders and decision makers, actively involved in addressing questions on the nature of the technologically mediated urban activity and experience.
Hybrid City Conference 2013, in Athens, Greece, will consist of three days of paper presentations, discussions, workshops and satellite events, under the theme “Subtle rEvolutions”. The events will be hosted by the Faculty of Communication and Media Studies, of the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens and are in particular organized by the University Research Institute of Applied Communication (URIAC), in collaboration with the New Technologies Laboratory of the faculty. The main venue of the conference is the central, historic building of the University of Athens, while workshops, projects’ presentations and parallel events will take place in collaborating centers and institutions in the center of Athens.
Theme – Subtle rEvolutions
ICTs, whether mobile, wireless or embedded in persistent architectural forms, facilitate the collection and dissemination of data, infusing the physical expression of the city with digital layers of content, contributing thus to the emergence of new hybridized spatial logics and novel forms of social interaction. These systems and the hybrid spatial experience they afford, encourage encounters among users; both embodied and mediated, and influence community dynamics, giving rise to networks around common interests and collectives of affect. Sometimes, such groups, irrespective of how ephemeral, unstable and dispersed they may be, negotiate a new kind of engagement with the urban environment and civic life, suggesting thus an organizational paradigm that manages to surpass traditional vertical hierarchies of space and consequently of power and control. Such configurations among communities, locations, contexts and intentions were manifested intensely in the interlinking of protest events around the world since 2011, the Arab Spring uprisings, the Occupy movement and anti-austerity demonstrations in Southern Europe, but they also gradually permeate everyday life in the contemporary metropolis.
As sharing and collaborative tactics migrate from online culture to the urban realm and ICTs become increasingly open and personalized, rich opportunities for new forms of participation in civic life arise. Citizens may be enabled to access information about the city and also to become involved in the production, collection and distribution of data related to urban matters. The Hybrid City Conference considers a further investigation of such processes of crucial importance, so as to gain a deeper understanding of the effect they have on the urban experience and to explore their contribution in shaping the future cities. In this respect, Hybrid City cordially invites papers that present concepts, case studies, research projects, works of art and best practices and promote the discussion on the theme. at a theoretical or a more practical, applied level. Emphasizing the inherently interdisciplinary nature of technologically mediated urban activity, we welcome proposals which examine, but are not limited to, the following topics:
• Open cities, open urban data.
• Environmental sensing and the Internet of things.
• Urban data visualization.
• Environmental perception, cognition, immersion and presence in the context of hybrid urban spaces.
• Citizen science and peer production of knowledge.
• Psychosocial perspectives into the impact of locative and pervasive media use.
• Placemaking, place attachment and place identity in the hybrid city.
• Cartography of hybrid spaces.
• Mobile commons and wireless practices.
• Public spaces and mediated presence.
• Gamifying the urban space: playful engagement and game-like citizenship.
• Hybrid spaces of conflict: forms of power and counterpower in the networked city.
• Tactical media practices in the urban context.
• From open data to data commons.
• Open source models of policy and governance.
• Emerging currencies and values.
• Issues of data ownership and copyrights in hybrid urban contexts.
The Hybrid City Conference welcomes submissions discussing concepts or documenting projects which are rEvolutionary, in the sense that through originality and innovation they contribute to shaping the future of the hybrid city, bringing forth change, perhaps subtle or gradual, but radical nonetheless. Contributions may also maintain a critical perspective in examining issues relevant to the hybridization process. Potential topics for further investigation could be:
• Openness vs. privacy. How much openness do we really need? Is there a danger in too much openness actually leading to transparency?
• Whose data is open data? Who has access to them and who could potentially make a profit out of them?
• How can citizens become motivated to contribute? How do they remain actively involved? Who benefits from such collective contributions?
• Are there any dangers in the city becoming too smart? What are potential tactics of disruption of such an emergence?
Keynote speakers confirmed so far:
• Roger Malina, Distinguished Professor of Arts and Technology, University of Texas, Dallas, Co Chair Art-Science Program, Mediterranean Institute of Advanced Studies, Marseille.
• Steve Benford, Professor of Collaborative Computing and Head of the School of Computer Science at The University of Nottingham, member of the Mixed Reality Laboratory and of Horizon, author of ‘Performing Mixed Reality’ (with Gabriella Giannachi), MIT Press.
• Eric Kluitenberg, independent theorist and writer on culture, media, and technology, editor in chief of Tactical Media Files, an online documentation resource of Tactical Media practices worldwide.
• Stephen Kovats, media and digital culture researcher, ‘r0g_agency for open culture and critical transformation’, #OSJUBA project initiator.
Submissions for papers:
Submissions should include:
• Extended abstract of 750 – 1000 words, (including references).
• Biographical statement of no more than 250 words.
Submissions should be in a Word or PDF format and not exceed 10 Mb in size. Please upload submitted files using the online platform.
Selected authors will be asked to submit a full paper (8 pages), or short paper (4 pages) to be included in the printed conference proceedings. Further details will be announced right after the notification of acceptance.
Important Dates:
All abstracts will be peer reviewed. Authors of accepted abstracts will be notified before the 20th of December 2012. Final submission of full papers will be expected no later than the 20th of February 2013.
Deadline of Abstract Submission: 20 October 2012.
The deadline has been extended till November 9th, 2012
Notification of Acceptance: 20 December 2012.
Deadline of Full Paper Submission: 20 February 2013.
Conference Dates: 23-25 May 2013.
Submission for projects
In the context of the Hybrid City events, a showcase of works relevant to the “Subtle rEvolutions” theme will be organized in partnership with the National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens (EMST). Projects will be presented as part of an online exhibition to be launched during the Hybrid City events, and will also be on view at the Media Lounge of the Museum.
We, therefore, welcome submissions of works that reflect the changes and dynamics of today’s cityscape and offer citizens new modes of information processing and understanding.
This can include, but is not limited to:
• online or downloadable digital tools,
• urban data visualizations,
• data flow mappings, digital cartographies,
• models for emerging alternatives,
• online documentation of innovative practices and tactics.
Works do not need to be strictly net-based but they do need to provide sufficient information online. Projects which will not involve digital technology in their production and do not refer to the theme addressed in this call will not be considered.
Submissions should include:
• A 300 word description of the project.
• A 200 word biographical description of the creator/s.
• URL of the project and other related links.
• Technical specifications.
Deadline of Project Submission: 20 January 2013
Please make project submission using the relevant online platform.
All projects will be reviewed and selected by curators from the “Hybrid City II” organization committee, the National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens and the partner institutions (BIS and CIANT).
Please note that creators wishing to have their work published as a paper and presented in the conference should also submit an abstract under the call for papers.
The “Hybrid City” events are realized in the context of the “City as a Hybrid Interface – HYBRI-C” project of the EACEA Culture programme 2007-2013 (partners of URIAC in the project are: BIS – Body Process Arts Association, İstanbul, CIANT, Prague and Fearless, Marseille). For more information on the project visit: http://hybri-city-project.eu/.
For any queries or further info please contact us at: hybridcityathens [at] gmail [dot] com
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