CFP: Information and Communication Technologies and Development (ICTD2016)
June 3-6, 2016
University of Michigan
University of Michigan
http://ictd2016.info/cfp/
Call for Papers and Notes
The Eighth International Conference on Information and
Communication Technologies and Development (ICTD2016), to be hosted at the University
of Michigan from June 3-6, 2016, cordially invites you to submit Full Papers
and Notes. Held in cooperation with ACM SIGCHI and ACM SIGCAS, ICTD2016 will
provide an international forum for scholarly researchers to explore the role of
information and communication technologies (ICTs) in social, political, and
economic development. The ICTD conferences have been taking place approximately
every 18 months since 2006; 2016 marks the first time that the conference will
go to an annual cycle.
Important dates
November 20, 2015: Deadline for submission of Full
Papers
January 15, 2016: Notification of acceptances for Full
Papers
January 29, 2016: Deadline for submission of Notes
February 26, 2016: Notification of acceptances for
Notes
March 25, 2016: Camera-ready Full Papers and
Notes due
All submission are due 11:59 pm UTC.
Over the past several decades, as radio and television have
been joined by computers, the Internet, and mobile devices, information and
communication technologies (ICTs) have become more pervasive, more accessible,
and more relevant in the lives of people around the world. Virtually no sphere
of human activity remains apart from ICTs, from markets to health care,
education to governance, family life to artistic expression. Diverse groups
across the world interact with, are affected by, and can shape the design of
these technologies. The ICTD conference is a place to understand these
interactions, and to examine, critique, and refine the persistent, pervasive
hope that ICTs can be enlisted by individuals and communities in the service of
human development. There are multidisciplinary challenges associated with the
engineering, application and adoption of ICTs in developing regions and/or for
development, with implications for design, policy, and practice.
For the purposes of this conference, the term “ICT”
comprises electronic technologies for information processing and communication,
as well as systems, interventions, and platforms that are built on such
technologies. “Development” includes, but is not restricted to, poverty alleviation,
education, agriculture, healthcare, general communication, gender equality,
governance, infrastructure, environment and sustainable livelihoods. The
conference program will reflect the multidisciplinary nature of ICTD research,
with anticipated contributions from fields including (but not limited to)
anthropology, computer science, communication, design, economics, electrical
engineering, geography, human-computer interaction, information science,
information systems, political science, public health, and sociology.