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SEQUENCE:18616877
CREATED:20090225T024300Z
DESCRIPTION:      INTRODUCTION\n\n        \n\n	 Recent innovations in science and 
 technology have provided human rights advocates, \n	   journalists, and 
 scientists with new tools to expose war crimes and other serious violations 
 of \n	   human rights and to disseminate this information in real time 
 throughout the world. As part of \n	   a major research university, the 
 Human Rights Center at University of California, Berkeley, is in \n	   a 
 unique position to showcase these recent developments and push new 
 frontiers of applied \n	   research.\n	 	   The Soul of the New Machine, an 
 international conference, will be held May 4 and 5, 2009, on \n	   the 
 Berkeley campus. The conference will convene leading thinkers and 
 practitioners to share \n	   best practices and develop new strategies for 
 incorporating technology to address human rights \n	   abuses. It will also 
 inspire the creation and advancement of innovative projects voters through 
 \n	   the “Mobile Challenge,” a competition for using mobile technology 
 in human rights \n	   investigations and advocacy.\n\n      \n	 CONFERENCE 
 OVERVIEW \n	 \n	\n	\n    \n     The international  conference will provide 
 a space for leading thinkers, civil society\nmembers, activists, 
 programmers, and entrepreneurs to imagine, discover, share, solve, 
 connect\nand act together.    \n     The conference will focus on two areas 
 of justice and human rights work: 1) evidence gathering\n      and 
 documentation and 2) advocacy and outreach. Conference participants will 
 explore how\n      new developments in science and technology could advance 
 these two areas. The conference\n      will combine keynote addresses and 
 plenary sessions with hands-on opportunities to interact\n      with 
 developers and users during panel discussions, workshops, and a poster 
 session/exhibition\n      hall. The conference will also showcase the 
 projects resulting from the Mobile Challenge (see\n      below).\n      
 Preliminary Program\n        Keynote Addresses        \n\n        During 
 keynote sessions at the opening and closing of the conference, 
 entrepreneurs and civil\n        society leaders will share their vision 
 for human rights investigation and advocacy in the age of\n        
 technology and new media. We aim to present leaders from the human rights 
 field as well as\n        from high tech or new media.\n        Plenary 
 Sessions\n          \n          Over the two-day conference, concurrent 
 panels will be devoted to:\n        “Eye in the Sky”: Geographic 
 Information Systems, Satellite Imagery, Data Collection and\n              
 Security \n             In the Field: Mobile Technologies and Forensic 
 Investigations \n             Human Rights in the Spotlight: Digital 
 Photography, Multimedia, Animation \n\n             Human Rights On and Off 
 the Intertnet \n        Technical Workshops and Group Discussions\n         
    \n            Along with the panel discussions, participants will roll 
 up their sleeves to tackle new challenges\n          in targeted hands-on 
 working groups and discussion forums. Topics will be identified by\n        
   participants in advance of the conference and may include social 
 networking, issue/event\n          advocacy, tools for data collection in 
 the field, and participatory databases or wikis.          \n         Poster 
 Sessions / Exhibit Hall\n          The poster sessions will provide a space 
 for individuals to interact informally and learn from\n        existing or 
 proposed projects. The exhibition hall will be open to the public 
 throughout the\n        conference. Up to 20 NGOs, corporations, 
 governmental agencies, academic institutions and\n        individuals will 
 present their work in poster sessions or online demonstrations. Exhibits 
 will\n        include representatives of:\n        Evidence gathering and 
 data collection              \n            Communication and advocacy       
        \n            Mobile Challenge projects              \n            
 Academic research              \n        The Mobile Challenge\n\n           
  The Mobile Challenge will invite submissions from nonprofits and advocacy 
 organizations to\n              develop mobile tools that combine data, 
 imagery, mapping and social networking to advance\n              human 
 rights. Mobile technology, often in conjunction with the Internet, can help 
 expose users\n              to a wide variety of information, accommodate 
 dynamic information, and enrich understanding\n          of critical issues 
 through the juxtaposition of data, photos, video, audio or text.          
 \n        We are especially keen to develop expertise in the use of mobile 
 technology for on-the-ground\n              reporting and documentation of 
 human rights abuses. Mobile phones are increasingly\n              the 
 means of communication in the developing world, and are undergoing 
 constant\n              improvements in technology and capabilities 
 (including data collection and GPS). The\n              conference will 
 provide impetus for their additional development—in both hardware and\n   
            software applications—for the purposes of human rights and 
 advocacy.          \n          By sharing the highlighted projects as case 
 studies, other organizations will gain a better sense\n              of the 
 possibility of the tools, while capacity builders in the field can provide 
 training and\n              support for the use of these technologies in 
 the context of human rights. Online voting will be used to select ten 
 Mobile Challenge Finalists, who will present their work in the Exhibit 
 Hall. Up to three projects\n              will be selected by a panel of 
 judges to receive an award of $5,000, $10,000, or $15,000, plus in-kind 
 technical\n              support to develop their new projects.          \n 
          The submission period for Mobile Challenge projects is February 
 2nd-March 20th. Visit the Mobile Challenge website to learn more about 
 project rules and guidelines or browse the Project Gallery to see what 
 participants have submitted so far.\n\n        Additional Events and 
 Information\n              Priming the Pump: Pre-Event Interaction \n       
      We will generate interest and ideas before the physical conference 
 through a dedicated\n            social networking site on Ning. Attendees 
 will have the opportunity to post questions or topics they\n            
 would like to see addressed at the conference and find users who might 
 develop solutions.          \n        Who Should Attend?\n            \n    
       The conference will attract a range of human rights activists, open 
 source enthusiasts,\n          professional developers, and new media 
 practitioners. We will invite international participants\n          working 
 on new tools and best practices for human rights documentation, community\n 
        organizing, and advocacy. \n      \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/02/24/18573008.php
SUMMARY:Soul of the New Machine
LOCATION:Clark Kerr Campus Conference Center, 2601 Warring St, Berkeley, CA
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/02/24/18573008.php
DTSTART:20090504T153000Z
DTEND:20090505T013000Z
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