Moving boundaries in mobilities research
Organised by the University of Cagliari in collaboration with the Cosmobilities Network
Venue: University of Cagliari (Sardinia, Italy)
Dates: 5-7 July 2012.
DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACT SUBMISSION: 25 April 2012
Keynote speakers
Malene Freudendal-Pedersen (Roskilde, Cosmobilities Network)
Sven Kesselring (MoRE, Munich/Aalborg, Cosmobilities Network)
Mimi Sheller (mCenter, Drexel, Philadelphia, Pan American Mobilities Network)
Background
Mobilities is a distinct strand of theory and research in social science, an evolving approach that synthesises in an original way existing and new writings on the combined movements of people, objects and information. The mobilities turn addresses conceptual and methodological challenges posed by old and new transformations in transport and communication systems and their implications for contemporary lives and natures.
Over the last decade the mobilities turn has generated enthusiasm across different fields and informed studies in a wide range of topics and problematics, from tourism, migration, transport, urban planning and mobile
communication to logistics, climate change, consumption and inequality. In the Anglophone world interest is particularly evident in sociology and human geography. One among many anecdotal examples is Tim Cresswell’s article ‘Towards a politics of mobility’
which currently figures as the most downloaded paper in the last twelve months in
Environment and Planning D: Space and Society.
While research has, up to date, tended to focus on the daily micromobilities of people and objects, attention is also being directed towards histories of mobility, the mobility of ideas, large scale circulation systems,
building materials and resource consumption and circulation.
As an approach with moving boundaries, mobilities research is also developing methodologies and methods that respond to both conceptual innovations and the empirical realities of a world on the move. Innovations in ‘mobile methods’ are openning up promising
prospects and still unfulfilled possibilities some of which are related to the way new ICTs routinely generate, collect and disseminate data. The mobilities turn, like most social science, still has to come to terms with these trends and create synergies with
streams of research that are successfully exploiting these opportunities. At the moment, major advances in network theory, one of the backbones of complexity theory, are coming not so much from the physical sciences but from research on the social, drawing
on vast amounts of data generated by intelligent networked infrastructures and mobile telephony.
Aim
This conference, funded by the University of Cagliari and organized in collaboration with the Cosmobilities Network, aims at discussing new directions in mobilities research, showcasing the state of the art in the field, and providing a unique opportunity to create lasting links among researchers, especially in the north and the south of Europe.
The language of this event will be English but the range of papers presented will be a reflection of the diversity of concerns, approaches and methodologies informing mobilities research in Europe and beyond. High quality abstracts on any aspect of mobilities are welcomed.
Introducing the Cosmobilities Network
This conference is part of a series of regular events jointly organised between European universities and Cosmobilities to promote mobilities research in southern and eastern Europe and strengthen links between researchers
in and outside academia. On Thursday 5 July, following the inaugural presentation, Malene Freudendal-Pedersen and Sven Kesselring will introduce the Cosmobilities Network, and talk about its origins in 2004, its activities, future plans and how to become involved.
Deadline for abstract (350 words) submissions
Dealine: April 25, 2012 (for late submissions please contact Javier Caletrío and Ugo Rossi)
Contact for abstract submissions and conference registration:
Javier Caletrío [log in to unmask]
Ugo Rossi [log in to unmask]
Organisers
Event organized and funded by the University of Cagliari (Dipartimento di Scienze Sociali e delle Istituzioni) in collaboration with the Cosmobilities Network.
Professor Giuliana Mandich (University of Cagliari)
Dr Javier Caletrío (CeMoRe, Cosmobilities, Visiting Fellow University of Cagliari)
Dr Ugo Rossi (University of Cagliari)
Registration and accomodation
The event is free but registration is required (please contact Javier Caletrío and Ugo Rossi). A modest contribution may be required for the participation to the conference dinner. For accommodation in Cagliari please have a look here: http://people.unica.it/visitingprofessor/2010/02/09/alloggiaccommodations/
Location
Cagliari, the capital of Sardinia, is the perfect location for a Cosmobilities event. A crossroad between cultures throughout the centuries - among which Phoenicians, Romans, Vandals, Byzantins, Aragons, Catalans- it offers one of the most beautiful and longest beaches in the Mediterranean and a crystal-clear sea around, besides an unspoiled natural environment consisting of lagoons, bird sanctuaries and wildlife reserves, as well as museums and archaeological sites, which altogether make it a unique scene in Europe.
Preliminary schedule Thursday 5 July 17.30 – Welcome and introduction 18 – Inaugural presentation 19.30 – Presentation of the Cosmobilities Network 20.30 – Dinner Friday 6 July 2012 10 – Keynote speaker 11.30 – Session 1 14 – Lunch 15.30 – Session 2 Saturday 7 July 2012 10 – Keynote speaker 11.30 – Session 3 14 – End of the conference
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