ResearchBib Share Your Research, Maximize Your Social Impacts
Sign for Notice Everyday Sign up >> Login

GHTC 2019 - 9th IEEE Global Humanitarian Technology Conference (IEEE GHTC 2019)

Date2019-10-18 - 2019-10-20

Deadline2019-03-31

VenueSeattle, USA - United States USA - United States

Keywords

Websitehttps://sites.ieee.org/ghtc

Topics/Call fo Papers

Stakeholders from the public, private, education and research, societal, funding and donor sectors are invited to submit proposed papers (or presentations) sharing Sustainable Development and Humanitarian Technology related insights, experiences, good practices and lessons learnt from a research, policy, practitioner and/or community perspective. To this end, GHTC welcomes paper and presentation submissions in the Sustainable Development and Humanitarian/Appropriate/Assistive Technology spaces. Submissions by practitioners (governmental, for-profit and non-profit), academics, private sector actors and policy makers describing intervention design and implementation, field experiences and best practices, case studies, project monitoring and evaluation results, and original research are of particular interest.
Focus areas for IEEE GHTC 2019 include (but are not limited to):
Agriculture & Food Security (SDG2)
Good Health and Well Being (SDG3)
Quality Education (SDG4)
Clean Water & Sanitation (SDG6)
Affordable & Clean Energy (SDG7)
Disaster Mitigation, Preparedness, Response & Recovery
Communication/Connectivity in Support of Development
As well as describing technological aspects, submissions are encouraged to consider socio-cultural, socio-economic, environmental and policy perspectives, and how sustainable development best practices such as community engagement, capacity building, local ownership, co-design and Collaborative Open Innovation, Social Return on Investment (SROI), Theory of Change planning, and PESTLE analysis are applied.
Three types of submissions are possible for presentation at GHTC: Full Papers are appropriate for mature work or completed projects and should not exceed eight pages; Short Papers are appropriate for early stage projects or authors wishing to share a snapshot of results-in-progress, experiences and perspectives, and should be three to four pages in length including a short reference section. Oral-Only (Poster) Presentations are appropriate for work-in-progress, projects in the pre-implementation stage as well as an option for practitioners, policy makers or community representatives who do not want to write a paper. Oral-Only submissions should be described in one page. Short Papers and Oral-Only Presentations will be accepted for presentation either during a paper session or poster session at the discretion of the Program Committee.

Last modified: 2019-01-14 07:44:09