
Physical address:
Main building
VU University Amsterdam
De Boelelaan 1105
1081 HV Amsterdam
The Netherlands
Room: The Aurora (De Aurora)
PROVISIONAL CONFERENCE AGENDA
Thursday September 27, 2012
8.15 - 17.30 Registration Desk
9.00 - 9.15 Plenary - Opening Session
9.00 Welcome from IFIP's Technical Committee 9
- Jackie Phahlahomohlaka, CSIR, South Africa and Chair of Technical Committee 9 ICT and Society
9.05 Welcome from the host institution
- Prof. Ronald Paans, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands
9.10 Welcome from the conference co-Chairs
- Magda Hercheui, Westminster Business School, United Kingdom and Chair of IFIP WG9.9 Sustainability and Diane Whitehouse, The Castlegate Consultancy, United Kingdom and Chair of IFIP WG9.2 Social Accountability and Computing
9.15 - 10.45 Plenary - Panel 1: National and International Policies (The
Aurora Room)
Panel Chair: Diane Whitehouse, The Castlegate Consultancy, United Kingdom and Chair of IFIP WG9.2 Social Accountability and Computing
Formatting the Public Sector with ICTs: Exploring Institutional Sources and Processes
- Noora H. Alghatam, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
Getting it Right: The Importance of Targeting Structural Causes of Failure in e-Government
- Silvia Masiero, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
National Identity Infrastructures: Lessons from the United Kingdom
- Aaron K. Martin, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
International Norms and Socio-Technical Systems: Connecting Institutional and Technological Infrastructures in Governance Processes
- Claudia Padovani, University of Padova, Italy and Elena Pavan, University of Trento, Italy
10.45 - 11.15 Morning break
11.15 - 12.45 Plenary - Panel 2: ICT for Peace and War (The
Aurora Room)
Panel Co-Chairs: Joey Jansen van Vuuren and Louise Leenan, CSIR, South Africa
Implementation of a Cyber Security Policy in South Africa: Reflection on Progress and the Way Forward
- Marthie Grobler, Joey Jansen van Vuuren and Louise Leenen, CSIR, South Africa
Mapping the Most Significant Computer Hacking Events to a Temporal Computer Attack Model
- Renier van Heerden, Heloise Pieterse and Barry Irwin, CSIR and Rhodes University, South Africa
The Dark Side of Web 2.0
- Aubrey Labuschagne, Mariki Eloff and Namosha Veerasamy, CSIR and Unisa, South Africa
Towards a Social Media-Based Model of Trust and its Application
- Erik Boertjes, Bas Gerrits, Robert Kooij, Peter-Paul van Maanen, Stephan Raaijmakers, and Joost de Wit, The Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO), Netherlands
Video Games and the Militarisation of Society: Towards a Theoretical and Conceptual Framework
- John Martino, Victoria University, Australia
Challenges to Peace in the 21st Century: Working towards a Good Information and Communication Society
- Gunilla Bradley, Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden, and Diane Whitehouse, The Castlegate Consultancy, United Kingdom
12.45 - 14.00 Lunch
14.00 - 15.30 Plenary - Session 1: Sustainable and Responsible Innovation - Concepts, Models and Examples (The
Aurora Room)
Chair: Magda Hercheui, Westminster Business School, United Kingdom and Chair of IFIP WG9.9 Sustainability
Information Waste, the Environment and Human Action: Concepts and Research
- Fons Wijnhoven, Pim Dietz and Chintan Amrit, University of Twente, Netherlands
Towards a Sustainable Governance of Information Systems: Devising a Maturity Assessment Tool of Eco-responsibility Inspired by the Balanced Scorecard
- Amélie Bohas and Laïd Bouzidi, University Jean Moulin Lyon 3, France
Building Human Infrastructure for the Digital Economy: Ryerson’s Digital Media Zone
- Wendy Cukier, Valerie Fox and Hossein Rahnama, Ryerson University, Canada
Sustainable Communications and Innovation: Different Types of Effects from Collaborative Research Including University and Companies in the ICT-sector
- Mattias Höjer, Katarina Larsen, Royal University of Technology, Sweden, and Helene Wintzell, Helene Wintzell AB, Sweden
15.30 - 16.00 Afternoon break
16.00 - 16. 30 Plenary - Video Link: Special Overview from North America (The
Aurora Room)
Chair: Norberto Patrignani, Politecnico of Torino, Italy
Civic Intelligence and CSCW
- Douglas Schuler, Evergreen State College, USA
16.30 - 17.30 Parallel - Session 2: Sustainable and Responsible Innovation - Current and Future Challenges (The
Aurora Room)
Chair: Magda Hercheui, Westminster Business School, United Kingdom and Chair of WG9.9 Sustainability
ICT and Environmental Sustainability: A Case Study of a Grassroots Initiative
- Ana Cardoso and João Carvalho, University of Minho, Portugal
Green IT for Innovation and Innovation for Green IT: The Virtuous Circle
- Christina Herzog, IRIT, France, Laurent Lefèvre, INRIA, France, and Jean-Marc Pierson, IRIT, France
The Role of ICT in Sustainable and Responsible Development: E-skilling
- Hossana Twinomurinzi, University of Pretoria, South Africa
Is the post-Turing ICT Sustainable?
- Norberto Patrignani, Politecnico of Torino, Italy, and Iordanis Kavathatzopoulos, Uppsala University, Sweden
16.30 - 17.30 Parallel - Session 3: Sustainable and Responsible Innovation - Healthcare (Room G-513)
Chair: Diane Whitehouse, The Castlegate Consultancy, United Kingdom and Chair of WG9.2 Social Accountability and Computing
Sustainable and Responsible ICT Innovation in Healthcare: A Long View and Continuous Ethical Watch Required
- Tony Cornford and Valentina Lichtner, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
Impact of ICT on Home Healthcare
- Sokratis Vavilis, Milan Petković and Nicola Zannone, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands
The Role of Technology in the Provision of Care for Patients with Chronic Conditions: the Chronic Care Model as a Framework for the Integration of ICT
- Nick Guldemond, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands, and Magda Hercheui, Westminster Business School, United Kingdom
Dinner
- This is an opportunity to get together and chat in a more relaxed setting. Dinner will be held in a pleasant restaurant in the area of the conference. All conference attendees are welcome to attend (the event is self-paying). As part of the same evening and event, to celebrate the involvement of many Dutch founding members of IFIP's working group 9.2, on social accountability and computing, including Wil Kreuwels. To assist planning, please email your interest to the conference organisers at HCC10[at]caos.nl.
Friday September 28, 2012
9.00 - 14.00 Registration Desk
9.00 - 10.30 Parallel - Session 4: Citizens’ Involvement, Citizens’ Rights and ICT - From Theory to Practice (The Aurora Room)
Co-Chair: Denise Oram, Glyndŵr University, United Kingdom (TBC) and Penny Duquenoy, Middlesex University, United Kingdom and Chair of IFIP SIG9.2.2 on framework of ethics of computing
Implementing Ethics in Information Systems, Presuppositions and Consequences in Ethics and Information Systems
- Laurence Masclet and Philippe Goujon, Facultés Universitaires Notre-Dame de la Paix, Belgium
Information Inadequacy: The Lack of Needed Information in Human, Social and Industrial Affairs
- Miranda Kajtazi, Linnaeus University, Sweden
ITGS - A blueprint for a Social Informatics Course in Pre-university Education
- Richard Taylor, International Baccalaureate, United Kingdom
Redesigning the Relationship between Government and Civil Society: An Investigation of Emerging Models of Networked Democracy in Brazil
- Eduardo H. Diniz and Manuella Maia Ribeiro, Fundação Getulio Vargas São Paulo, Brazil
Cyberactivism and Collective Agency: Cases from China
- Yingqin Zheng, University of London, United Kingdom, and Cheng Zhang, Fudan University, China
Corporate Social Media Use Policy: Meeting Business and Ethical Responsibilities
Don Gotterbarn, De Montfort University, United Kingdom
9.00 - 10.30 Parallel - Session 5: Citizens’ Involvement, Citizens’ Rights and ICT - Privacy and Security Challenges (room Stoa)
Chair: Martin Warnke, Leuphana Universität, Germany and Chair of IFIP WG9.5 Virtuality and Society
Social Games: Privacy and Security
- Mathias Fuchs, University of Salford, United Kingdom
Is Privacy Dead? – An Inquiry into GPS-based Geolocation and Facial Recognition Systems
- Jens-Martin Loebel, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, Germany
Theorising Open Development through an Institutional Lens: A Study of Iranian Online Interactions
- Magda Hercheui, Westminster Business School, United Kingdom, Brian Nicholson and Aghil Ameripour, Manchester Business School, United Kingdom
Packet Inspection — Shifting the Paradigm of Fundamental Rights
- Agata Królikowski, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, Germany
Informed Strategies of Political Action in IP-based Social Media
Andrea Knaut, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, Germany
10.30 - 10.45 Morning break
10.45 - 12.00 Plenary: Namur Award 2012 Ceremony (The Aurora
Room)
Award to be given to Professor Stefano Rodotà, Italy, followed by his award speech.
12.00 - 12.45 Plenary: Panel 3 – Challenges of ICT Critical Infrastructures and Society - Views from Computing Associations Worldwide (The Aurora
Room)
Co-Chairs: Penny Duquenoy, Middlesex University, United Kingdom and Chair of IFIP SIG9.2.2 on framework of ethics of computing and Diane Whitehouse, The Castlegate Consultancy, United Kingdom and Chair of IFIP WG9.2 Social Accountability and Computing
12.45 - 14.00 Lunch
14.00 - 15.30 Plenary: Keynotes and Closing
Chair: Jackie Phahlahomohlaka, CSIR, South Africa and Chair of Technical Committee 9 ICT and Society
14.00 - 14.45 Keynote speech
- Prof. Hans Verkruijsse, Tilburg University, Netherlands
14.45 - 15.15 Closing speech
- Abbas Shahim, VU University Amsterdam and Atos Consulting, Netherlands
15.15 - 15 30 Wrap up and thanks
- Magda Hercheui, Westminster University, United Kingdom and Chair of WG9.9 Sustainability and Diane Whitehouse, The Castlegate Consultancy, United Kingdom and Chair of WG9.2 Social Accountability and Computing
15.30 - 17.30 Plenary: Looking Ahead - Digital Futures 2050 (The Aurora Room)
Digital Futures 2050
- Ms Bernadett Koteles, DG CONNECT, European Commission, Bekgium
- With our interactive input, this is an envisioning exercise on how several aspects of society in Europe and globally might look like by 2050.
Relaxation after the end of the conference: impromptu, informal special interest group meeting on the ethics of computing framework
Members of SIG 9.2.2 on the ethics of computing framework will hold a short, informal gathering during the late afternoon of Friday 28 September, 2012 in order to catch up on latest news and events.
Dinner, provisionally 19:30
IFIP's Technical Committee 9 members/national computing association representatives, working group and special interest group chairs will meet up for dinner at a small restaurant near the VU. (Attendees are self-paying. Potential attendees are asked to indicate their interest to Diane Whitehouse[at]thecastlegateconsultancy.com, and will be reminded on registration at the conference.)