Aquí se incluyen Calls For Papers para participar de eventos relacionados con Adopciones, Familias, Infancias
- What do human rights mean to disabled children in the UK? Friday 30th April 2010 Dynamic Earth, Edinburgh 9.30am - 5.10pm Delegate Fee: £150.00 including lunch http://www.crfr.ac.uk/events/disabledchild.html
The UK’s 700,000 disabled children are widely recognised as facing disproportionate discrimination in realising their basic human rights such as the right to life; the right to a family life; the right to play; the right to an effective education and the right to health care. In the words of the UNCRC Committee talking about the UK “children with disabilities continue to face barriers in the enjoyment if their rights..Including the right to access health services, leisure and play”.
This conference will look at the human rights of children living with disability in the UK in the context of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and the UK’s reports to the United Nations.
The aim of the conference is to bring together academics, lawyers, health, education and social care specialists, parents, children, voluntary organisations, NGOs, service providers and policy makers to examine:
• Where are we now? • How can we ensure children with disability are fully included in all future reports to the United Nations? • How can we make the Convention and the fulfilment of human rights generally a reality for the UK’s disabled children, so that they can lead full and fulfilling lives free from discrimination?
Themes to be included: • How does the UN Convention work and why is it failing disabled children? • Rights to social care and education • Rights to life and health care • Parents’ experiences • Young people’s experiences • What are the barriers to the fulfilment of disabled children’s rights? • What are the solutions? • What can I personally do to make things better?
Who should attend? Anyone with an interest in disabled children from social work, health, education, academia, parents, voluntary organisations and disabled young people
Laura Marshall Training & Events Administrator The Centre for Research on Families and Relationships (CRFR) The University of Edinburgh 23 Buccleuch Place Edinburgh EH8 9LN Tel: 0131 651 3001 www.crfr.ac.uk Office Hours: Monday-Wednesday 9am-4.30pm
-CALL FORPAPERS/ POSTER PRESENTATIONS CONFERENCE CHILDREN, FAMILIES AND THE MIGRATION EXPERIENCE: OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES Middlesex University, Hendon Campus, London, NW4 4BT –
Friday 21 May 2010
ConfirmedKeynote speakers:Prof VivEdwards, NCLL, University of ReadingProf AnnPhoenix, Institute of Education, University of London
Please sendabstracts for papers or poster presentations of no more than 300 words to MagdaLopez Rodriguez at m.rodriguez@mdx.ac.uk by 16 December 2009.
The eventis part of a project funded through the ESRC Knowledge Transfer and ExchangeProgramme. The project aims to disseminate and further discuss the findings ofa research report Polish Children in London Primary Schools: challenges andopportunities (funded by Multiverse) amongst education practitioners, policymakers and researchers.
The final report of the project will be launched at theconference.
Conferenceorganisers: Louise Ryan, Alessio D'Angelo, Magda Lopez Rodriguez and RosemarySales, Social Policy Research Centre, Middlesex University.
- 6th Global Conference Creative Engagements - Thinking with Children
Saturday 3rd July - Monday 5th July 2010 Mansfield College, Oxford
Organising Chairs Phil Fitzsimmons Faculty of Education The University of Wollongong Australia Email: philfitz@uow.edu.au
Dr Rob Fisher Inter-Disciplinary.Net Priory House, Wroslyn Road, Freeland, Oxfordshire OX29 8HR Email: ce6@inter-disciplinary.net
The conference is part of the 'At the Interface' series of research projects run by ID.Net. It aims to bring together people from different areas and interests to share ideas and explore various discussions which are innovative and challenging. All papers accepted for and presented at this conference will be eligible for publication in an ISBN eBook. Selected papers may be invited to go forward for development into 20-25 page chapters for publication in a themed dialogic ISBN hard copy volume.
- 3rd INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE. Centre for the study of childhood and youth. Childhood and Youth in Transition
6th - 8th JULY 2010 2nd call for papers…….
In the context of global social, political and economicchanges the conference this year will explore the ways in which these broadshifts are having an impact on ideas of childhood and youth and on children'sand young people's everyday lives. Themes for exploration might include: • UNCRC and its aftermath-changes in law and policy • Childrenand young people’s changing citizenship •Technological change, new media and consumption • Environmental change and children’s futures • Economicrecession and child poverty • Transitionsin the life course for children and young people in relation to school and work • Health,well-being and the body
This year we also welcome suggestions for smallsymposia around specific themes. If you wish to organise a symposia pleasecontact Allison James (allison.james@sheffield.ac.uk).
Abstracts: Abstracts of no more than 200 words should be sent to the conference administrator, Dawn Lessels,by January 31st 2010. d.j.lessels@sheffield.ac.uk.
- 5th Global Conference Visions of Humanity in Cyberculture, Cyberspace and Science Fiction
Sunday 11th July 2010 – Tuesday 13th July 2010 Mansfield College, Oxford, United Kingdom
Joint Organising Chairs Daniel Riha Charles University Prague, Czech Republic E-mail: rihad@inter-disciplinary.net
Rob Fisher Network Founder and Network Leader Inter-Disciplinary.Net Priory House, Freeland, Oxfordshire OX29 8HR United Kingdom E-mail: visions5@inter-disciplinary.net
The conference is part of the 'Critical Issues' series of research projects run by Inter-Disciplinary.Net. It aims to bring together people from different areas and interests to share ideas and explore various discussions which are innovative and challenging. All papers accepted for and presented at the conference are eligible for publication in an ISBN eBook.
Selected papers may be invited to go forward for development into 20-25 page chapters for publication in a themed dialogic ISBN hard copy volume.
- 3rd Global Conference Forgiveness - Probing the Boundaries
Thursday 15th July 2010 – Saturday 17th July 2010 Mansfield College, Oxford
Joint Organising Chairs:
David White Department of Philosophy, University of Calgary, Canada E-mail: dmw@inter-disciplinary.net
Rob Fisher Network Founder and Leader Inter-Disciplinary.Net Freeland, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom E-mail: for3@inter-disciplinary.net
The conference is part of the Probing the Boundaries programme of research projects. It aims to bring together people from different areas and interests to share ideas and explore various discussions which are innovative and exciting. All papers accepted for and presented at this conference will be eligible for publication in an ISBN eBook. Selected papers maybe invited for development for publication in a themed hard copy volume(s).
This conference will be held at University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK from 2-5 August 2010
Organized by: Common Ground Publishing
- ESF-LiU Conference Home, Migration and the City: New Narratives,New Methodologies
6-10 August 2010 Scandic Linköping Vast, Linköping, Sweden
This conference takes‘narratives’ – broadly defined as stories, diaries, myths, photographs, music,films, media images and representations of movement – as the analyticalstarting point for new research on migration. Narratives have severaldimensions. Firstly, migrant narratives need to be understood as inherentlyspatial. As is widely acknowledged, migrants’ stories of movement are oftenstories of different places at different moments, and thus are essentially‘spatial stories’. Secondly, this spatiality of migration narratives ismulti-scalar; it can relate to belonging on a national, political scale,represent locality dynamics, more small-scale, personal experiences ofmigration, or even the material narratives of migration, such as stories ofsignificant objects and material culture. The political element of the largerscale narratives is especially important; it is these that foster the exclusionand inclusion of migrants in societies. Thirdly, the performative element ofmigrants’ narratives is very strong; not all narratives are textual but insteadare enacted through music, theatre, film, food, or dance. Finally, suchnarratives can also be highly visual, corporeal, and embodied, whether throughmedia representations, artwork, or architecture. Such a broad conceptualisationof migrant narratives demands new interdisciplinary theories and methodologiesto understand the interconnected landscapes of home, migration and the city.
- 5th ESFR Congress - Second Call for Papers Family transitions and families in transition Catholic University of Milan, Italy 29th September – 2nd October 2010
The Athenaeum Centre for Family Studies and Research is pleased to host the 5thESFR Congress in Milan, Italy, from 29th September to 2nd October 2010.
Congresstheme and sub-themesThe 5thESFR Congress will be focused on the transitions that the family faces duringthe course of life, the identification of resources and risks associated withthem, and the processes that families go through whenever a transition occurs.
For further information please see our website at: http://esfr2010.unicatt.it/ or contactus at info.esfr2010@unicatt.it