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Dear all,

FINAL CALL for EKSIG2009.

Apologies for cross posting.

Best wishes,
Kristina


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EKSIG 2009: EXPERIENTIAL KNOWLEDGE, METHOD and METHODOLOGY
International Conference 2009 of the DRS Special Interest Group on  
Experiential Knowledge

FINAL DATE for submissions of abstracts: 1 December 2008!


The EKSIG International Conference 2009 will address the theme of  
"Experiential Knowledge, Method and Methodology". It will be convened  
by the DRS Special Interest Group on Experiential Knowledge (EKSIG),  
and hosted by London Metropolitan University.

Date: Friday 19 June 2009
Organisers: Linden Reilly, Chris Smith, Kristina Niedderer, Seymour  
Roworth-Stokes
Venue: London Metropolitan University, London, UK
Conference home page: http://www.experientialknowledge.org
Contact: [log in to unmask]


Final CALL FOR PAPERS

For EKSIG 2009, we invite submissions for the theme "Experiential  
Knowledge, Method and Methodology". With this theme we aim to provide  
a forum for debate about methodology and methods for the inclusion  
and communication of knowledge in research and practice in the  
creative disciplines.

The need to be more explicit about research methods, frameworks, and  
methodologies has arisen from the increasing use of creative and  
professional practices as part of the practice of research in recent  
years. While research guidelines and regulations have been either  
generic enough, or were adjusted, to accommodate the use of some  
creative and professional practices under certain conditions, the  
debate about the nature, aims, validity, evaluation, and necessity of  
such research has continued.

While all research has a method, and disciplines are  
characteristically driven by debates about the best methods for  
achieving their aims, that which constitutes a research method in  
design and related disciplines is still a matter of debate. The  
debates about research methods in design in many ways echo questions  
addressed in the design methods movement of the 1960s and 1970s, such  
as: 'What are design methods?' Now framed in terms of design  
research, questions address the conditions under which design methods  
might be used as research methods as well as the nature of discipline  
specific methodologies.

The developing understanding in this debate is that the inclusion of  
practice in the research process or as a research outcome helps to  
integrate and/or communicate those kinds or parts of knowledge that  
cannot easily be made explicit, such as the tacit part of  
experiential and procedural knowledge, commonly known as tacit  
knowledge. With this conference, we wish to explore the different  
ways in which tacit knowledge can be integrated and communicated  
within the framework of research.


Questions of interest are, for example:

-       What are design methods and what are design research methods?
-       How is knowledge/knowing created within the process of research?
-       What frameworks are there to guide discipline specific  
methodologies?
-       How can we integrate and utilize tacit knowledge in the  
process of research?
-       Why is the use of tacit knowledge important in research?
-       What contribution can the use of practice make to the  
inclusion of tacit knowledge in research?
-       What contribution can the use of design practice make to the  
development of design research?
-       What methods are there for the communication of tacit  
knowledge within research?
-       Can we talk about the communication of tacit knowledge, or  
should we talk about a transfer?
-       What means and methods do we have to transfer tacit knowledge?

We wish to bring together people from different fields and  
disciplines with different approaches to address these issues. We  
invite contributions from the design disciplines (design,  
engineering, craft, media etc), philosophy, education, health and  
knowledge management that are concerned with methods and methodology  
in research and in creative and professional practice; with the  
nature, role, and management of knowledge within research; and with  
the role and use of creative practice (both as process and outcome)  
as a means by which to develop and manage experiential/tacit  
knowledge within research.


SUBMISSIONS

For EKSIG 2009, we invite position papers, which offer challenging  
new views on the subject. Position papers will be selected subject to  
a double blind review process by an international review team. In the  
first instance we ask for the submission of abstracts. Authors of  
selected abstracts will be asked to submit full papers (4000-5000  
words).

We invite the submission of abstracts of 700-800 words (excluding  
references) for position papers by 1st December 2008. Abstracts  
should be sent as plain text in the body of the email from the lead  
researcher's email address.  Please send your abstract via e-mail to  
[log in to unmask]


PUBLICATION

All papers selected for presentation at the conference will be  
published in the conference proceedings, an abstract booklet and a CD/ 
website.

The conference has also secured collaboration with the Journal of  
Research Practice, and selected papers will be published in the journal.



IMPORTANT DATES
8 September 2008        Submission of abstracts open
1 December 2008        Submission of abstracts ends
5 January 2008        Notification of accepted abstracts
1 March 2009            Submission of full papers
1 April 2009                    Notification of acceptance of papers
1 May 2009              Submission of revised papers
19 June 2009            Conference

Please find further details on the conference home page:  http:// 
www.experientialknowledge.org



Dr Kristina Niedderer
Reader in Design and Applied Arts
School of Art and Design
University of Wolverhampton
Molineux Street
Wolverhampton WV1 1SB

email: [log in to unmask]
tel: +44 (0)1902 321 550
web: http://www.niedderer.org


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