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[Commlist] CFP - The City, Design Informatics and Ethics
Thu Mar 10 10:06:07 GMT 2022
As part of the hybrid CULTURES, COMMUNITIES and DESIGN conference, talks
and publications will be organised around the themes and speakers below.
The conference seeks to connect digital design to ethical positions on
development.
Cultures, Communities and Design Conference
Virtual and In-person – Calgary, Canada
28-30th June, 2022
https://architecturemps.com/calgary/
- CHRIS SPEED – Design Informatics: From Countryside to Country-side
Prof. Chris Speed FRSE, is Chair of Design Informatics at the University
of Edinburgh where he collaborates with a wide variety of partners to
explore how design provides methods to adapt and create products and
services within a networked society. Chris directs the Institute for
Design Informatics that is home to a combination of researchers working
across the fields of interaction design, temporal design, anthropology,
software engineering and digital architecture, as well as the PhD,
MA/MFA and MSc and Advanced MSc programmes. He is Director of the
Creative Informatics R&D Partnership and Co-I to the Next Stage Digital
Economy Centre DECaDE led by Surrey with the Digital Catapult. He was
made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 2020.
- WILLIE ERMINE – Ethical Space
Willie is an Assistant Professor with the First Nations University of
Canada. He is from the Sturgeon Lake First Nation in the north-central
part of Saskatchewan where he lives with his family. As a faculty member
with the First Nations University of Canada, he lectures in the areas of
Education, Humanities, Indigenous Studies and Research Methods. He has
published numerous academic articles and contributed reports to the
Tri-Council Panel on Research Ethics. He has presented at various
national and international conferences and symposiums on topics such as
education, research and in particular, the nature of Indigenous thought.
Throughout his research, Professor Ermine has worked extensively with
Elders. He promotes ethical practices of research involving Indigenous
Peoples and is particularly interested in the conceptual development of
the ‘ethical space’–a theoretical space between cultures and worldviews.
https://architecturemps.com/calgary/
OVERALL CALL:
‘The Countryside’ – a polemically generic term Rem Koolhaas has recently
used to reposition debates about our cities to those of rural areas.
While posited as ‘new’, it is, in reality, a well established mode of
thinking. Through notions such as the peri-urban for example,
geographers, sociologists, architects, urban designers and regional
economists have all debated the urban-rural relationship for several
decades. Under this framework we are obliged to consider the city and
its architecture on its own terms, but also address the ‘rural’ in its
particular context and, importantly, explore the parallels and mutual
influences at play.
According to this logic, the environmental, social, cultural, planning
and design issues relevant in our cities find parallels outside the city
fringe. Calgary, the host city of this conference, is a perfect example.
It has heavy industry, a thriving business economy and a growing tourist
sector. However, pockets of the city contend with poverty, pollution and
gentrification. As a city, Calgary also ‘pressures’ its surrounding
lands including the Rockies and the Banff nature reserve.
While such debates are of concern today around the world, they were also
highlighted 50 years ago when the host school of this conference was
founded. Back then, Archigram and Buckminster Fuller argued that
architecture, technology and the ‘earth’ were interconnected. Jane
Jacobs connected the built environment with social concerns. Aldo van
Eyke fought for communities and the participatory practices and, in
1971, the National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA) was
founded in the United States.
Picking up on its 50th year anniversary, the Faculty of Environmental
Design / School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape at the
University of Calgary seeks to foster debate around issues relevant at
its opening which remain important and unresolved today.
Dates: June 28th, 2022 – In-person and virtual
Abstracts: 01 April, 2022
https://architecturemps.com/calgary/
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