e-Society 2010 – 2nd CFP until 8 January 2010
CALL FOR PAPERS – Deadline for submissions (2nd call): 8 January 2010
IADIS INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE E-SOCIETY 2010
March 18-21, 2010 – Porto, Portugal
http://www.esociety-conf.org/
Keynote Speaker (confirmed): Christina Preston, MirandaNet Founder, UK
Conference Background and Goals
The IADIS e-Society 2010 conference aims to address the main issues of concern within the Information Society. This conference covers both the technical as well as the non-technical aspects of the Information Society. Broad areas of interest are eSociety and Digital Divide, eBusiness / eCommerce, eLearning, New Media and E-Society, Digital Services in eESociety, eGovernment /eGovernance, eHealth, Information Systems, and Information Management. These broad areas are divided into more detailed areas (see below). However innovative contributes that don’t fit into these areas will also be considered since they might be of benefit to conference attendees.
Format of the Conference
The conference will comprise of invited talks and oral presentations. The proceedings of the conference will be published in the form of a book and CD-ROM with ISBN, and will be available also in the IADIS Digital Library (online accessible). The best paper authors will be invited to publish extended versions of their papers in the IADIS Journal on WWW/Internet (ISSN: 1645-7641) and other selected Journals.
Types of submissions
Full and Short Papers, Reflection Papers, Posters/Demonstrations, Tutorials, Panels and Doctoral Consortium. All submissions are subject to a blind refereeing process.
Search
Categories
Archives
Recent Comments:
- Stevan Harnad on ATG Hot Topics of the Week: Open Access and Boycotting Journals
- Digitizing Good | SocialEarth on Google Gift Gives Business Process Outsourcer Digital Divide Data a Technology Edge
- Ramune Kubilius on “I Wonder” Wednesday: Alumni access to licensed e-resources?
- Scot on “I Wonder” Wednesday: ISI’s Impact Factor
- Steve McKinzie on ATG Article of the Week: Lies and Damn Lies: Issues in Collection Development







