Google Earth controversy on geography agenda
university-of-canterbury
Fri Jul 02 2010 12:00:00 GMT+1200 (New Zealand Standard Time)
Google Earth controversy on geography agenda
Friday, 2 July 2010, 10:29 am
Press Release: University of Canterbury
Google Earth controversy on the agenda at international conference
More than 300 geographers from around the world will be gathering at Rydges Hotel in Christchurch next week to participate in the biennial conference of the New Zealand Geographical Society in association with the Institute of Australian Geographers.
The programme includes three leading international scholars conducting cutting-edge scholarship on the theme of geospatial technologies.
On Monday night, Professor Lisa Parks ( University of California-Santa Barbara) will open the conference with a keynote exploring the controversies which surround the emergence of Google Earth and its use in the wars of Iraq and Afghanistan.
On Tuesday morning, Dr Matt Duckham (University of Melbourne) will discuss some of the scientific challenges facing computing systems which must compute simultaneously in and about geographic space.
On Thursday morning, Professor John Wilson (University of Southern California) will discuss the transformations taking place in geographic information science and their implications for the discipline of geography.
In addition to the keynotes, conference delegates will present a large number of papers over three days on a number of geographic themes. Conference panels will explore among other things indigenous knowledges and rights, contemporary media and new technologies, third world development and tourism, sustainability and climate change, health and healthcare, urban change and transformation, relationships between humans and animals and gender and sexuality.
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Visitors to Christchurch will also have the opportunity to participate in a number of fieldtrips. Delegates can explore the recent revitalization of the central city, visit the Waipara Basin to visit the Mt Cass wind farm, Waipara wineries and the Kate Valley landfill site or travel from Lyttelton to Pegasus Town to explore the changes that have taken place on the Canterbury coastline.
Full details about the conference (5-8 July), including the conference programme can be found at
http://www.nzgs2010.org.nz/
ENDS
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