this might be of interest to some. cheers martin --- From: Paul Bevan <[log in to unmask]> Reply-To: Geography and Communications and Information <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Call for Papers: SCI 2002 - Cybergeographies Apologies for cross-posting... CALL FOR PAPERS "Cybergeographies" Invited Session at The 6th World Multi Conference On Systemics, Cybernetics And Informatics (SCI 2002) July 14 - 18, 2002 Sheraton World, Orlando, Florida, USA Organisers: P. Bevan and D. Dixon We would like to invite papers for this session at SCI 2002 on the theme of “cybergeographies”. The aim of SCI 2002 (http://www.iiis.org/sci2002/) is to promote discussion and interaction between researchers and practitioners focused on disciplines as well as business and recreational groups. This invited session will highlight the varied contributions geographers (and geographical concepts) are continuing to make to the study of cyberspace, focusing on following themes: THEMES These themes are not intended to be thoroughly comprehensive, merely suggestive and we would welcome any abstracts centred around cybergeography/cybergeographies I. The Production of Cyberspace 1. Uneven development of the technologies, financial networks and the skills required for the production of cyberspace. 2. The political and economic context within which particular cyberspace projects are conceived and developed. 3. The individual as cyberspace producer: locating, orientating and embedding oneself within the structures of cyberspaces 4. Public, private, bizarre and dull: the diversity of webscapes II. Imaginative Cyberspaces/places 1. Critical taxonomies and cartographies of cyberspace 2. Discourses (metaphoric, allegoric, synechdic, ironic, material and virtual) of cyberspace, within and without the internet. 3. The creation, maintenance and transformation of particular cyberplaces 4. Remaining/becoming oneself: Identity (trans)formation in the age of the Internet III. The Consumption of Cyberspace 1. Uniform norms and their accompanying transgressions 2. Locating the cyborg in transmaterial spaces 3. Utilizing cyberspace within individual and group projects 4. Realising the virtual: Physical manifestations of virtuality IV. Flowers amid the cyborgs: Nature and Cyberspace 1. The emergence of a 'third nature' through cyberspace, and the ramifications thereof for 'second nature' 2. The unfolding of new bio-technologies of the body through cyberspace, such as the Genome Project and telemedicine. 3. Designing nature, from climate models to MUDs 4. The role of cyberspace in the promulgation of anti-capitalist, environmental discourses. SUBMISSION GUIDELINES Abstracts of 300-400 words should be sent to Paul Bevan at [log in to unmask] by May 15 2002.