ISCRAM2012: The 9th International Conference on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management.  22-25 April 2012 Vancouver, Canada.

Each year, ISCRAM brings together top researchers and practitioners working in the area of information systems and crisis management. In 2012, it will be held in the vibrant city of Vancouver, Canada. The conference provides an excellent opportunity to exchange information and knowledge on new research and best practices with a diverse group of colleagues.

Call for Practitioner Reports, Work-in-Progress Papers, Posters & Special Sessions Submissions
Deadline January 15th, 2012


Practitioner Report Papers
In order to incorporate a variety of perspectives in crisis research, ISCRAM encourages the participation of crisis response professionals through brief practitioner reports.  Ongoing dialog between the crisis response community and academics working in this field has yielded important collaborative efforts that ensure research is grounded in the tasks and priorities of disaster management professionals, while also encouraging the adoption of laboratory innovations into field applications.  Practitioner reports are brief (5 pages or less) and are lightly reviewed for clarity.

Work-in-Progress Papers
Work-in-Progress papers are typically brief reports of academic work that is not yet completed.  This format provides an important avenue for researchers to get feedback from colleagues during the planning stages of a research effort.  Work-in-Progress papers are also limited to 5 pages (about 2,500 words) and are lightly reviewed.

Posters
Poster submissions are accepted for all track and special session topics.  Participants in the PhD/Doctoral Student Colloquium are also required to submit a poster.

Special Session Submissions
ISCRAM2012 organizers are pleased to announce four Special Sessions this year, which focus on integrating different sub-disciplines within the ISCRAM community.  Because these sessions formed later than the tracks, Special Sessions will accept any format (including full papers) until January 15th, 2012.
 
ISCRAM2012 Tracks
- Modelling and Simulation
- Human Experiences in the Design of Crisis Response and Management Services and Systems
- Command and Control Studies
- Education and Training
- Planning, Foresight and/or Risk Analysis
- Social Media and Collaborative Systems
- Geographic Information Science and Technology (GIS&T) for Crisis Response and Management
- Research Methods
- Healthcare Crisis Management Systems
- Humanitarian Challenges
- Decision Support Methods for Complex Crises
- Wireless Connectivity Management
- Inter-Organizational Exercises and Operations
- Intelligent Systems
- Event-Driven Techniques and Methods for Crisis Management
- Wireless Sensor Networks for Emergency Response
- Early Warning and Expert Systems for Disaster Management
- Serious Games for Crisis Management
- Open Track

Special Sessions
- Qualitative methods & Community Engagement in Crisis Management Research (Open to submissions)
- Agro-Terrorism (Open to submissions)
- Future of ISCRAM research (Invited panel)
- Humanitarian Workflow Modelling & Analysis (Invited panel)

NOTE: Special Sessions accepting submissions will take all paper formats until January 15th, 2012.

Further information can be found in the Conference website:
www.iscram.org/iscram2012

Key Dates:
•Deadline for full paper submissions -- December 9th, 2011
•Deadline for special sessions, work-in-progress paper, practitioner papers, posters -- January 15th, 2012
•Deadline for doctoral student colloquium papers -- February 15th, 2012

Organizing Committee:
Brian Fisher (Conference Chair), Simon Fraser University / U. British
Columbia, Canada
Richard Arias (Conference Co-chair), Simon Fraser University, Canada
Leon Rothkrantz (Program Chair), TU Delft, The Netherlands Defense Academy, the
Netherlands
Jozef Ristvej (Program Co-Chair), Žilina University, Slovak Republic
Zeno Franco (Program Co-Chair), Medical College of Wisconsin, USA

Questions can be addressed to [log in to unmask]

--
Zeno Franco, PhD
Assistant Professor
Dept. Family & Community Medicine
Clinical & Translational Science Institute
Community Engagement Key Function
Medical College of Wisconsin
(414) 955-4372 (direct)



--
Zeno Franco, PhD
Assistant Professor
Dept. Family & Community Medicine
Clinical & Translational Science Institute
Community Engagement Key Function
Medical College of Wisconsin
(414) 955-4372 (direct)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

You have been sent this email because you are a registered member of the Disaster Resilience mailing list:

This is a 'lightly' moderated list.

If you wish to send a message to the list 'reply' or post to: [log in to unmask]

If you wish to subscribe to or unsubscribe from this list go to: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/disaster-resilience and follow the subscribe/unsubscribe instructions

For more options, visit this group at: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/disaster-resilience

- The Disaster Resilience list aims to develop knowledge and understanding of the complex term, resilience; and to identify the key dimensions of resilience across a range of disciplines and domains. - The creation of this list is linked to the FP7 project, emBRACE: Building Resilience Amongst Communities in Europe www.embrace-eu.org - emBRACE is jointly co-ordinated by Prof Debby Sapir (Universite Catholique De Louvain) and Dr Maureen Fordham (Northumbria University) - This DISASTER-RESILIENCE discussion list was launched on 13 October 2011, International Day for Disaster Reduction http://www.unisdr.org/2011/iddr/. The List is managed by Maureen Fordham, John Twigg and Hugh Deeming - The emBRACE project has received funding from the European Community‘s Seventh Framework Programme FP7/2007-2013 under grant agreement n° 283201. The European Community is not liable for any use that may be made of the information shared on this list.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~