From: Mary B. Ruvane [ruvane@email.unc.edu]
Date sent: 29 Jan 2008
Apologies for the late notice and cross posting. The deadline for formal abstracts may be extended, but a statement of interest should be submitted as soon as possible.
Call for Papers: 2008 Annual Meeting of the Social Science History Association (www.ssha.org)
Session Theme: CONTRIBUTORY GIS FOR HISTORICAL RESEARCH
Location/Date: Miami, Florida, USA , 23-26 OCTOBER 2008
Proposal Deadline: February 1, 2008 -- extension requests considered
Organizers:Contact: Mary Ruvane (Ruvane@email.unc.edu)
- Ian Gregory, Lancaster University, UK
- Mary Ruvane, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA
Real time contributory Web applications are fast becoming the de facto tool of choice for facilitating timely information exchange between various social groups. Established examples include wikipedia, facebook, and flickr. More recently applications for sharing geographic information have emerged, such as GoogleEarth and its companion Wikimapia, providing an unprecedented opportunity for historical researchers to collaborate on reconstructing past geographies. But how trustworthy are these burgeoning websites? Is the shared information accurate, in standard formats, well documented, or peer reviewed? To be a viable tool in support of academic research these concerns must be addressed.
This session seeks speakers who have successfully adopted contributory GIS tools in support of their historical research or teaching. Topics may include, but are not limited to:NOTE: Applications for Graduate Student travel awards are due February 1, 2008 (http://ssha.org/conference/travel-grant)
- Projects utilizing contributory Historical GIS
- Accuracy of geographic representations
- Trustworthiness of shared data
- Data standards solutions
- Authenticating archival source material
- Peer review/moderator solutions
- Dealing with inferences
- Privacy & security issues
- Data contributor diparities (e.g., amateurs, geographers, historians, etc.)
Mary B. Ruvane
PhD Student
School of Information & Library Science
University of North Carolina @ Chapel Hill
thoughts and comments across the boundaries of computing, ancient history, epigraphy and geography ... oh, and barbeque, coffee and rockets
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Friday, February 1, 2008
Short-notice CFP: Contributory GIS for Historical Research
This, by way of H-HISTGEOG:
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The deadline for abstracts has been extended until Feb. 15, 2008. --MB Ruvane
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