4S Conference Deadline -- 16 Feb -- Rotterdam, August 2008
Hello Everyone, The deadline for proposals for the joint meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science with the European Association for the Study of Science and Technology (EASST) is fast approaching. The meeting will be held in Rotterdam from August 20-23. It should be great fun, as 4S is always diverse and lively and the added influx of Europeans from EASST will spice things up further. (Europeans, please feel free to reverse that to avoid hints of Anglo-Saxon imperialism). The call is on the web at http://www.4sonline.org/meeting.htm. Recent 4S meetings have suffered from a combination of the democratic impulse to accept as many panels and papers as possible with the physical constraints of conference hotels. This sometimes led to 12 minute papers in curtained off alcoves. I heard that this is being addressed, though I'm not sure whether a higher rejection rate or a bigger hotel is the immediate solution. The CFP this year asks for 20 minute papers, and asks for 2 hour sessions with 5 papers, a discussant, and 10 minutes of questions. Factoring in gaps between presenters and so on I wouldn't count on getting more than 15 minutes in such a situation. You might get lucky with a panel of 4 papers. However, in the past the organizers have been aggressive in adding extra papers to less packed panels, so I wouldn't risk submitting one with only 3 as it might be packed with random additions. My other advice is to leave out dates from your titles. 4S audiences do not always pack history sessions. SIGCIS has organized panels for the two previous 4S meetings, and also held informal dinners for members. If you have some ideas, please feel free to send them to the list or to me. (However, with our tiny new addition to the family my time is a little less flexible than usual, so I'd need details ASAP). Best wishes, Tom www.tomandmaria.com/tom
Science Studies Vol.20, no.2 is available now! Contents: Sampsa Hyysalo and Tarja Knuuttila: Editorial Yu-Wei Lin and Lars Risan: Guest Editorial: Free/Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS) Articles: Mary L. Darking and Edgar A. Whitley: Towards an Understanding of FLOSS: Infrastructures, Materiality and the Digital Business Ecosystem Didier Demazière, François Horn and Marc Zune: The Functioning of a Free Software Community: Entanglement of Three Regulation Modes - Control, Autonomous and Distributed Stephanie Freeman: The Material and Social Dynamics of Motivation: Contributions to Open Source Language Technology Development Anita Say Chan: Retiring the Network Spokesman: The Poly-Vocality of Free Software Networks in Peru Book reviews: Patrice Flichy: The Internet Imaginaire by Mikkel Flyverbom Adrian Mackenzie: Cutting Code. Software and Sociality by Susanne Bauer For further information visit the Science Studies web-site www.sciencestudies.fi _______________________________________________ This email is relayed from members@sigcis.org, the email discussion list of SHOT SIGCIS. The list archives are at http://sigcis.org/pipermail/members/ and you can change your subscription options at http://sigcis.org/mailman/listinfo/members
participants (3)
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Petri Paju -
Sandra Mols -
Thomas Haigh