My Mind Words Paper [Search results for call for papers

  • Upcoming Deadlines

    Updated:
    June 5, 2011

    The River Crosses Rivers: A Festival of Short Plays by Women of Color - Call for Submissions -06/06/2011

    Word Warrior Creative WORDshop (South Africa) -06/07/2011

    Job Opening: Junior Editor for Submerge Publishers (South Africa) -06/09/2011

    "Mohammed — The Messenger of Peace" Essay Contest -06/10/2011

    Call for Candidates: Bayeux-Calvados Awards for War Correspondents -06/10/2011

    Introduction to Screenwriting Workshop (Auteur Film School, South Africa) -06/11/2011

    Thinkers and Trouble Makers: Panel Discussion of Queer Women of Color Activists (California) -06/11/2011

    Mixed Roots Literary Festival Opens June 11th at the Japanese American National Museum -06/11/2011

    Umhlanga Life Short Story Competition (South Africa) -06/13/2011

    The Guardian 2011 International Development Journalism Competition on Global Poverty -06/13/2011

    Apply for the Intajour International Academy of Journalism Fellowship in Germany -06/15/2011

    Call for Entries: Africa in the Picture Film Festival -06/15/2011

    Call for Essays/ Creative Pieces - African Women in Motion: Gender and the New African Diaspora in the United States -06/15/2011

    Call for Submissions from Poets of Color: "The Moment of Change" Anthology of Feminist Speculative Poetry (Aqueduct press) -06/15/2011

    Call for Papers: Children’s Literature and Reading in and of Africa (IBBY Africa conference, Swaziland) -06/15/2011

    Call for Submissions: The Black Barbie Anthology -06/15/2011

    Call for Articles to be Included in the Book "Transformation of Islam in 21st Century" (University Press) -06/15/2011

    Book Reviews on "Popular Fiction" and "Genre Fiction" for Reconstruction: Studies in Contemporary Culture -06/15/2011

    Apply for the Cave Canem Fellowship (African American Poetry) at Vermont Studio Center -06/15/2011

    Call for Papers: Fourth International Symposium of Printing and Publishing in the Language and Countries of the Middle East -06/15/2011

    Reporting Regional Integration: Sponsored Course for SADC Journalists -06/17/2011

    Arabic Literary Translation Workshop with Paul Starkey (London Review of Books) -06/19/2011

    Amazwi Ethu South African Tales Creative Writing Contest -06/19/2011

    Golden Baobab Prize (for African short story for children, top prize: $1000) -06/20/2011

    Pulitzer Center Seeks West African Journalists to Report on Water and Sanitation -06/20/2011

    For French/ English Writers: The Camac - Fondation Tenot Writers Residency in France -06/20/2011

    Job Opening: Online Fashion Editor for 36Boutiques.co.za -06/25/2011

    South African Literary Awards (SALA) 2011 -06/30/2011

  • An Opportunity to Present Your Ideas in Bari, Italy - Call for Papers: 8 Ideas to Change the World (eligible: Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt)

    Deadline: 30 June 2012

    Over the last few years, ANPAS, also through the support of important European networks like Samaritan International (SAMI) and the European Center for Volunteering (CEV), has developed a particular attention to European policies in the belief that our country can be a bridge to the countries of the Mediterranean. Last year we also acceded to the Mediterranean Autonomous Network for Youth (MANY), a network of youth in the Mediterranean that wants to promote the meeting and sharing of knowledge between youth belonging to different social and cultural groups, affirming a culture of learning. ANPAS doesn’t want volunteers to remain indifferent to the grand phenomenon that the countries bordering the mare nostrum are experiencing, which have appealed to our affluent society with movements of people (migration) and socio-political upheavals (the Arab Spring). So then? So we would like to see what’s in store beyond our shores, learn new ideas, and build relationships in the Mediterranean. Through this Call for Papers, we invite the youth of society, citizens 32 years of age and younger, to share ideas to better the world, to construct a more just and united society, for the development of a culture of solidarity, for the protection of the environment and of common goods.

    Do you have an idea to change the world? Share it with us!

    We have chosen the National Meeting of Solidarity that will be held in Puglia, a natural bridge between Europe and the Mediterranean, where 8 youth will present their projects: 8 ideas to change the world, in particular in the area of relations between Italy and the people of the Mediterranean, presented by youth of these countries.

    HOW IT WORKS

    Among all the ideas received by the 30th of June 2012, only 8 will be selected, that can be presented on the occasion of the International Conference of Youth of the Euromediterranean that will be held in Bari, Saturday the 29th of September 2012.

    Therefore, if your idea convinces us, you will fly to Bari and have 10 minutes to present your idea, in the most attractive mode. Are you ready?

    WHO CAN PARTICIPATE

    The projects can be presented by youth under age 32, who can be residents in Italy or in these countries: Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Malta, Libya, Egypt, Turkey, Cyprus, Greece, Albania, Montenegro, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, and Slovenia.

    We would also like to hear the ideas of immigrants that live in Italy but come from these countries: the true bridge of the Mediterranean!

    CONDITIONS OF PARTICIPATION

    To those who will be selected, you will be given the opportunity to participate in Bari at the entire National Meeting of Solidarity that will be held from Thursday the 27th of September to Sunday the 30th of September. ANPAS will pay the costs relative to accommodation, meals, and transfers to the headquarters of the Meeting. To promote better organization of the day, participants will make sure to specify the necessary logistics for transfers, so that we can make arrangements.

    OFFICIAL RULES

    These are the official rules for the Call for papers 8 ideas to change the world sponsored by Anpas.

    SPONSOR

    The call for papers ( the “call”) is sponsored by Anpas - Associazione Nazionale Pubbliche Assistenze located at via Pio Fedi 46/48, 50142 Firenze (FI) – Italy. Anpas telephone number is +39 055 303821 and the email address is internazionale@anpas.org. All inquiries should be directed via email.

    CONTEST OVERVIEW

    We have chosen the National Meeting of Solidarity that will be held in Puglia, a natural bridge between Europe and the Mediterranean, where 8 youth will present their projects: 8 ideas to change the world, in particular in the area of relations between Italy and the people of the Mediterranean, presented by youth of these countries.

    Over the last few years, ANPAS, also through the support of important European networks like Samaritan International (SAMI) and the European Center for Volunteering (CEV), has developed a particular attention to European policies in the belief that our country can be a bridge to the countries of the Mediterranean. Last year we also acceded to the Mediterranean Autonomous Network for Youth (MANY), a network of youth in the Mediterranean that wants to promote the meeting and sharing of knowledge between youth belonging to different social and cultural groups, affirming a culture of learning. ANPAS doesn’t want volunteers to remain indifferent to the grand phenomenon that the countries bordering the mare nostrum are experiencing, which have appealed to our affluent society with movements of people (migration) and socio-political upheavals (the Arab Spring). So then? So we would like to see what’s in store beyond our shores, learn new ideas, and build relationships in the Mediterranean. Through this Call for Papers, we invite the youth of society, citizens 32 years of age and younger, to share ideas to better the world, to construct a more just and united society, for the development of a culture of solidarity, for the protection of the environment and of common goods.

    In ANPAS, we believe that the collaboration of different worlds gives birth to better ideas: share your experience and knowledge, and together we will try to transform our ideas into a concrete project, that through intercultural dialogue can have a real impact on the territories.

    PROCESS

    Fill out the form in all its parts: completing your profile information and information related to your project, taking care to respect the maximum length expected. Then send the form via email to: internazionale@anpas.org The call will run from 12:00 PM(CET) May 10, 2012 to 12:00 PM(CET) June 30, 2012. Anpas has the right at anytime to terminate the Call at its sole discretion.

    SELECTION CRITERIA

    All action plans received will be evaluated by a Commission, composed of individual members of Anpas, which will choose the 8 most original, creative, practical and effective ideas. A complete action plan has to contain the following elements, which are the selection criteria for the Evaluation Commission.

    • Summary – Give the objective of the plan, the instruments, and the anticipated results. Include how this approach is new/unique and will be more successful than other approaches.

    • Needs assessment – Present an analysis of the conditions faced in the targeted area. Explain why such conditions deserve greatest concern, and why these specific challenges have hindered development in the locale.

    • Necessary resources – State the financial and other resources needed for the initiative.

    • Plan the execution – Describe the initiative, the target audience, the methods to achieving results and an activities schedule.

    • The real impact – Indicate the results of initiative, how many people will be affected, and the anticipated time to achieve results. Among all the ideas received, only 8 will be chosen:

    • One (1) will be chosen among proposals of Italian subjects;
    • Six (6) among proposals of subjects coming from the Mediterranean basin: Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Malta, Libya, Egypt, Turkey, Cyprus, Greece, Albania, Montenegro, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Slovenia;
    • One (1) among proposals of young migrants residing in Italy coming from countries listed above;

    ORIGINAL WORK

    Each participant states and guarantees that any submission he/she posts is original, and does not violate or otherwise infringe upon any rights of any third party and that such submission will not violate agreements the participant has with any third party or otherwise.

    In the event that Anpas’ use of the submission is challenged by any third party, the participant agrees at his/her own expense to provide information and cooperate including, without limitations, participating in any legal or administrative action with Anpas.

    WINNERS ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

    To those who will be selected, you will be offered the opportunity to participate at the National Meeting of Solidarity which will run from Thursday September 27,2012 to Sunday September 30,2012 in Bari.

    Anpas will bear the costs of room, board and travel to reach the Meeting place. To accommodate the best organization of the days, participants will have to specify their logistic needs about travel, which we will arrange.

    Moreover winners can participate in the free events scheduled of the Meeting, understanding that expenses not expressly stated in the rules are an exception. The winner agrees to accept the dates and spaces established, such as hotels, airlines, trains, ships, etc. The winner agrees that the acceptance of any trip as a prize is their own initiative, risk, and responsibility. The winner needs to have a valid passport and visa if necessary. If the winner does not have a valid passport and/or visa at the time, the trip will be cancelled.

    NOTIFICATION OF THE WINNERS

    The winners will be contacted via email within fifteen (15) working days from the deadline. It will be requested that they complete and send to Anpas an entry form. If it is not possible to contact you within seven (7) working days from the first attempt to notify, the prize will be designated to the participant ranked immediately below.

    DATES

    The call will be open from 12:00 PM (CET) on May 10, 2012 until 12:00 PM (CET) on June 30, 2012. All proposals submitted during this period will be valid. Announcement of the Winners Anpas will announce the winners and publish their names on their website www.anpas.org, following the close of the call and the receipt by Anpas of the participation form and other necessary information.

    USE OF WINNER’S DATA AND INFORMATION

    Each winner who accepts the prize grants to Anpas the right, at any moment and from time to time, to disclose to a third party, print, publish, broadcast and use, worldwide and in any media now known or developed in the future, including through the Internet, the name, portrait, photograph, voice, and biographical information of each winner for informational purposes, publicity, and promotion, without additional consideration, except where prohibited by law.

    DISQUALIFICATION

    Anpas reserves the right, at its exclusive discretion, to disqualify any participant it deems ineligible to participate in the contest. Failure to comply with these rules may result in a participant’s disqualification.

    COST

    There is no cost to participate in the call. Each participant is responsible for his or her own costs to participate in the call.

    ELIGIBILITY

    The call is open to proposals presented by youth under 32, who have reached the age of maturity in their own country or who are at least 18 years old.

    THE PARTICIPANTS MUST BE:

    • Citizens residing in Italy;
    • Citizens residing in the following countries: Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Malta, Libya, Egypt, Turkey, Cyprus, Greece, Albania, Montenegro, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Slovenia;
    • Migrants who live in Italy, coming from the countries already mentioned.

    Any person who violates a rule, obtains an advantage in a manner banned by participation in the call, or obtains the status of winner with fraudulent means, will be disqualified. Any unsportsmanlike, disruptive, harassing, or threatening behaviour is forbidden. Anpas will interpret these rules and eventually resolve controversies, conflicts, or ambiguities relating to the rules of the call, and the decisions of the Sponsor in respect of such disputes shall be final. If the conduct or outcome of the call is affected by human error, any mechanical malfunctions, or failures of any kind, intentional interference or any event beyond the control of the Sponsor, Anpas reserves the right to terminate this call, or make other such decisions regarding the outcome of the call that the Sponsor deems appropriate.

    Any attempt by a participant or any other individual to deliberately disrupt or damage ordinary operation of this call, telephone systems or websites is a violation of criminal and civil laws. If an attempt is made, Anpas reserves the right to seek damages from any such participant to the fullest extent permitted.

    The winners must use their true name (as it appears on their government issued ID) when participating in the call and may not participate when using a false name.

    COMPLIANCE WITH THE LAW

    The conduct of the call is governed by the applicable laws of the Italian Republic, which take precedence over any rule contrary herein. This call is void and not offered by ANPAS in any jurisdiction where it is prohibited or limited by the applicable laws.

    LIMITATION OF LIABILITY

    If for any reason the call is not capable of running as planned, including infection by computer virus, bugs, tampering, unauthorized intervention, fraud, technical failures, or any other causes which corrupt or affect the administration, security, fairness, integrity, or proper conduct of this Call, ANPAS reserves the right at its sole discretion, to disqualify any individual who tampers with the Call, and to cancel, terminate, modify or suspend the Call.

    Anpas also does not assume responsibility for any errors of omission, interruption, cancellation, defection, or delay of the operation or transmission, communication line failure or destruction, or unauthorized access or changes to entries.

    Anpas is not responsible for any problem or technical malfunction of the Internet or phone lines, online system, server, provider, or computer software. Anpas does not assume responsibility for technical problems or traffic congestion on any Internet site, or any combination thereof, including any damage or injury to the participant’s or any other person’s computer in connection with participation in the call.

    Anpas is not responsible regarding any problem receiving the entry, which is the sole responsibility of the participants. The winners agree to hold harmless Anpas, its officials, employees, affiliates and representatives for any injury, accident, malfunction, or legal cause of action arising from, or in connection with, participation in the call. By participating in the call, all participants and winners waive all claims of liability against Anpas, its employees, the sponsors, and their respective employees, for any personal injury or loss that may arise from participation in the call or acceptance of the prize.

    LIMITATION OF REMEDIES

    Under no circumstances, including negligence, shall Anpas, or its officials, directors, employees, or representatives be held liable for any direct, indirect, incidental, consequential, punitive, or exemplary damages, including but not limited to, the loss of profits, or other economic losses deriving from participation in the call, posting on or access to or downloading of any type of material or information from any web site owned by Anpas, or acceptance or usage of a payment, including but not limited to, damage to property and to the maximum extent permitted by law, damages for bodily or personal injury, even if Anpas or any affiliates, their successors or delegates or any of their respective officials, directors, employees, agents, or representatives have been advised of the possibility of such damages or loss. Some jurisdictions do not permit the exclusion or limitation of incidental or consequential damages, so the above limitations or exclusions may not apply to the participant.

    Each participant agrees that the limitations and exceptions contained in these rules represents an agreement between the participants and ANPAS as to the allocation of risk between them in connection with the Sponsor’s obligation under these official rules.

    AMENDMENTS

    Anpas reserves the unilateral right to suspend, cancel, terminate, or modify the call without advance notice and thereafter to re-commence this call, only at such times and in the terms and agreements that Anpas shall deem reasonable under the circumstances.

    In the event that any term of these official rules is in conflict with the law under which these rules were construed, or if any term is considered invalid by any court of competent jurisdiction, such term shall be deemed to be restated to reflect, if possible, the original intention of Anpas and the participants, in accordance with the applicable law, and the remainder of the official rules will remain in full effect. In the event that such invalid provision relates to matters which constitute the essence of these official rules, and such provision cannot be restated to reflect the original intention of the parties, the call shall be deemed null and void.

    SURVIVAL

    Notwithstanding any expiration or other termination of this call, and except in the event that this call shall be void in its entirety, the provisions of these official rules, which by their nature survive expiration or termination of the call, will remain in full effect until each such provision expires with its respective term.

    Download: application form

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For queries/ submissions: internazionale@anpas.org

    Website: www.anpasnazionale.org/

  • Call for Papers - Europe With or Without Muslims: Narratives of Europe

    Deadline: 1 July 2012

    Call for Papers for a special issue for the Journal of Muslims in Europe: “Europe with or without Muslims – narratives of Europe”

    Guest editors:

    • Göran Larsson, University of Gothenburg
    • Riem Spielhaus, University of Copenhagen

    We are seeking papers for a special issue of the new double blind-peer reviewed Journal by BRILL on Muslims in Europe to come out in Spring 2013. This special issue seeks to take up tensions in conflicting stories about and different perspectives on Europe’s history and identity that present Europe without Muslims or contrastingly portray Muslims as part of Europe’s past and present.

    Under the headline “Europe with or without Muslims – narratives of Europe” we aim to bring together a number of perspectives from multiple disciplinary fields such as history, religious studies, cultural anthropology, political science and sociology in an analysis of diverging accounts and notions of Europe over time and places throughout the continent, open as well to external perspectives. The initial question thereby is, what role Islam and Muslims have played and still play in the imagining of what Europe means.

    This way we aim to direct our view at the nexus between constructions of Europe and developments within contemporary European Islam providing space both for a critical review of academic approaches and the development of new impulses for future research.

    Besides empirical papers we strongly encourage theoretical papers that challenge current research on Islam and Muslims in Europe and reflect on the own position of the researchers and his or her contributions to the construction of Europe and the role and function of Islam and Muslims.

    We invite papers that address one of the topics of two sessions described below. Deadline for sending your abstracts: July the 1st, 2012. Accepted participants will be notified by July 20, 2012. If your paper is accepted, you must submit the final paper (max 10,000 words inclusive of footnotes) by 20 October 2012.

    Applications to submit a short paper should include: 1. Proposer’s name and affiliation, 2. a title for the paper, 3. a ca. 500 word abstract.

    All abstracts and paper should be written in English.

    Time frame:

    • Deadline for abstracts (ca. 500 words) 1.July 2012
    • Deadline for sending final papers 20.October 2012
    • Publication 15.March 2013

    For this special issue we invite papers on the narratives imagining Europe with and without Muslims analyzing contents, actors and setting of those narratives that relate to one or several of the following questions:

    1. Localizing debates connecting Europe and Islam:

    In what way are debates about Europe and its identity mentioning the European past with reference to Muslim’s presence in Europe on the local, regional, national or European Union level? How do these different levels (local, regional, national, transnational) intersect?

    2. Imagining Europe without Muslims:

    What are the main patterns of the dominant constructions of Europe’s heritage like notions of a Judaeo-Christian heritage? Where and by whom are these narratives told? To what extent are they embedded in European integration or projects of community or nation-building?

    3. Narratives of Europe inclusive of Muslims:

    In what cases is the Muslim history of Europe used as counter narrative to question the construction of Europe as a Christian continent? What groups of people insist on an imagination of Europe with Muslims? How are these narratives used to strengthen a feeling of belonging and responsibility of current Muslims?

    4. Contextualizing Islam debates in European history of thought:

    Is it possible to make any comparison between current debates about Islam and Muslims and previous debates about ties between religions and national identities e.g. different Christian denominations in early modern Europe?

    5. Imagining Europe from outside:

    How is the relationship between Europe and its Muslim inhabitants viewed beyond the Mediterranean? Do accounts of European history and presentations of the contemporary Europe from within and without bear considerable differences?

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For submissions: paper proposals should be send electronically in Microsoft Word formats to Göran Larsson, University of Gothenburg: goran.larsson@religion.gu.se and Riem Spielhaus, University of Copenhagen: rsp@teol.ku.dk.

    Website: http://www.brill.nl/publications/journals/journal-muslims-europe

  • Call for Papers: Impact of the North African Revolutions on Sub-Saharan Africa (honorarium: $200)

    Deadline: 31 July 2011

    AfriMAP invites submissions of papers on the impact of the events in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya on governance in sub-Saharan Africa. Among the different approaches that could be adopted are analyses of:

    * Possible impacts of the changes in North Africa on the democratization processes in sub-Saharan Africa

    * Events in a particular country or several countries in sub-Saharan Africa (e.g. Uganda? Zimbabwe? Angola? Burkina Faso?) showing how activists and politicians have explicitly referred to the north African revolutions as inspiration for their own actions.

    * The extent to which the conditions that brought about the North African revolutions exist in sub-Saharan African countries.

    * How the events in Libya in particular may affect its historical role in shaping discourse on governance in the Sahel and elsewhere in Africa and in the African Union.

    * The impact of these events on the AU and the regional integration project (is the United States of Africa dead in the water - or could it be strengthened?)

    * The potential or actual role of AU institutions in seeking to resolve or support the conflicts and reforms underway.

    * The way in which the changes of government in Tunisia and Egypt may impact on the interpretation of the concept of 'unconstitutional changes of government' as defined in the Declaration on the Framework for an OAU Response to Unconstitutional Changes of Government adopted in 2000, and the African Charter on Democracy Elections and Governance (for background, see the paper by Chidi Odinkalu, on the AfriMAP website: in French or in English).

    * The role of religious-based organisations in the North African revolutions may impact the way in which sub-Saharan African religious groupings see their role in politics.

    * The impact of the events on sub-Saharan migrants and asylum seekers in those countries.

    * What these events say about the link between economic growth and political/democratic development.

    The deadline for submissions is 31 July 2011.

    Our objective is to encourage and promote new thinking and debate on issues that AfriMAP is exploring through its research. We are particularly keen to encourage submissions based on primary sources, personal research and innovative thinking. Papers are accepted in English, French and Portuguese, up to 2,000 words in length, and those selected will be published on our website. Winners will receive an honorarium of US$250.

    See the Guidelines on Call for Papers for further details on submitting a paper.

    The winning papers from our previous calls for papers are available on the AfriMAP website. If you would like to contact AfriMAP for advice on topics for your paper, please email us at info@afrimap.org or at JegganGJ@osisa.org.

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: info@afrimap.org or JegganGJ@osisa.org

    For submissions: info@afrimap.org or JegganGJ@osisa.org

    Website: http://www.afrimap.org/

  • Call for Papers by the African Literature Association (US)

    Deadline: 8 March 2012

    The African Studies Association (ASA)-2012 Conference

    Philadelphia, PA; November 29-December 1, 2012

    In 1962 at the Kampala conference, participants engaged the first major debate on the ‘language question’ in African literature. For African literary critics, that conference was the first defining moment in the development and study of contemporary African literature. The second moment occurred in 1983 with the publication of Chinweizu’s /Toward the Decolonization of African Literature /which//helped boost emerging discussions on post-colonial studies in African literary criticism. That moment generated the impetus that has sustained the different cultural and theoretical approaches that continue to sustain debates in African literary studies.

    Now, as we enter the second decade of the 21st century and its global proliferation of entry points and exits in the context of information technology, we need to assess the extent African literary engagement and production will enable clearer definitions of the different aspects of African literary studies. This means that the quality and nature of African literature in the information age needs to be more carefully addressed in ways that reaffirm our efforts to bring African literary studies into full prominence on the global stage. As practitioners, acknowledging the strengths and limitations in our current understanding of African literature will also show how vibrant and powerful a tool African literature is in the study of African societies and cultures.

    This Call for Papers solicits papers for ALA panel presentations on the topics indicated below at the African Studies Association 2012 conference. Please indicate your interest by submitting
    a one-paragraph abstract on a topic based on one of the panels listed below.

    1.Roundtable: “African Literary Studies Today.”

    2.Panel: “The Future of African Literary Studies.”

    3.Panel: “Women’s Contributions to African Literary Studies.”

    It is expected that all papers accepted for presentation will have been fully written and sent to the panel chair and discussants of the papers (no exceptions, please!) at least one week before the conference. Please submit your abstracts through email:

    On or before March 8, 2012

    To: Anthonia Kalu at: kalu.5@osu.edu
    Anthonia Kalu, PhD
    Professor
    Department of African American and African Studies
    486 University Hall
    230 North Oval Mall
    Columbus, OH 43210-1319
    Phone: (614) 688-5779
    Fax: (614) 292-2293
    E-mail: kalu.5@osu.edu

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: kalu.5@osu.edu

    For submissions: kalu.5@osu.edu

    Website: http://www.africanstudies.org/

  • Call for Papers - Evolving African Film Cultures: Local and Global Experiences (Africa Media Centre, University of Westminister - London)

    Deadline: 8 June 2012

    Evolving African Film Cultures: Local and Global Experiences, a conference organised by the Africa Media Centre, University of Westminster

    Date: Saturday 10 and Sunday 11 November 2012

    Venue: University of Westminster, Regent Campus, 309 Regent Street, London, W1B 2UW

    This is the first call for papers for a two-day conference on changes in African film and television production and, of equal importance, the transformation of African film audiences in local and global contexts. African film production, distribution and consumption have been more noticeable in the West African region, as showcased by biennial exhibitions at the FESPACO festivals in Burkina Faso. Arguably, such festivals have encouraged a type of production that is admired by Europeans, but which is rarely available to, or appreciated widely by audiences in those productions’ countries of origin. Portuguese and Arab-speaking regions in Africa have also developed diverse and high quality film cultures, but their experiences need to be debated within a wider context. More recently, Anglophone regions, led by Nigeria, have developed popular commercial film models which have been enthusiastically received by African audiences. One could say that African film markets have been rapidly expanding, with many implications for film and policy makers, distributors and audiences.

    Since 2000, audiences for African film elsewhere in the world have grown in size. Such expansion has implications for film content, form, production strategies, distribution mechanisms and policy frameworks. African filmmakers have to delicately negotiate widening markets, for instance, by paying more attention to the political economy of film consumption in the rapidly changing local and global contexts. The digital economy, especially the internet, has opened up huge opportunities for the wider distribution of African film. Papers may focus on, among other topics, the following:

    • Production cultures and circulation of film;

    • History, myth and identity in African film;

    • The representation of African cultures in film;

    • Audiences, reception and sites of spectatorship;

    • Indigenous language films and the problems of subtitles and illiteracy.

    • Morality and spirituality in African cinema;

    • Exhibition, financing and distribution of African film;

    • Cinema and digital technologies;

    • Film festivals and the development of national cinemas in Africa;

    • Revenue, business models and piracy

    • Auteur, film genres and form

    • Collaborative filmmaking in the global north/trans-national collaborations

    • African film philosophy

    • The image, sound, written and spoken word in filmic narratives

    • Institutions, policies and film agencies

    DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACTS

    The deadline for submission of abstracts is Friday 8 June, 2012. Successful applicants will be notified by Monday 18 June, 2012. Abstracts should be 300 words long. They must include the title of the conference, presenter’s name, affiliation, email and postal address, together with the title of the paper. Please ensure when saving your abstract that your name is part of the file name.

    PROGRAMME AND REGISTRATION

    This two day conference will take place on Saturday 10 and Sunday 11 November, 2012. The fee for registration (which applies to all participants, including presenters) will be £140, with a concessionary rate of £60 for students, to cover all conference documentation, refreshments and administration costs. Registration will open in September 2012.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For queries/ submissions: Helen Cohen, Events Administrator, at journalism@westminster.ac.uk

    Website: http://www.westminster.ac.uk/research/a-z/africa-media-centre

  • Call for Papers: ICTs, New Media and Social Change in Africa (UK)

    Deadline: 5 April 2012

    ICTs, New Media and Social Change in Africa

    Conference organised by the Africa Media Centre

    In Africa, as in many societies, new technologies increasingly play a prominent role in the production and exchange of information. In spite of their limited penetration on the continent, new information technologies are beginning to have a noticeable effect on politics, activism, culture, entertainment and many other facets of public and private life. There is frequent usage of the Internet and of mobile devices, the rise of influential blogs and news sites, evidence of social media that are more than tools for self-presentation together with the overreliance of major newspapers, radio and television on websites for a broader and more diverse reach in ways that suggest a paradigm shift and the alteration of social values in communication practices today. Evolving media policies, attitudes and use patterns in Africa and the Global South remarkably indicate that the benefits of ICTs and New Media are not confined to the Global North alone.

    Key questions, however, relate to how new forms of communication technologies have advanced or subverted social change in Africa. The purpose of this one-day conference is to bring together African scholars from diverse disciplines to collectively explore the thematic issue of the transforming role of ICTs and new media. We are concerned to bring to the fore sub-themes of changing production environments, shifts in funding mechanisms, the role of audiences/users, regulation debates and the ICTs’ potential for human development. Wikileaks have, for example, shown how African governments have struggled to maintain transparency and uphold their citizens’ right to information.

    The Arab Spring and other manifestations of tension and struggle among governments, citizens and terrorists, call for debates on social transformation in the context of new media and ICTs. To address these and similar issues relating to the theorisation of the role and influence of new media technologies in Africa, we invite scholars to submit panel proposals and/ or abstracts in the following and related areas:

    • Theoretical and Conceptual Issues on New Media and Social Change
    • Citizen empowerment, Diasporas and new media
    • Social media for Social Change in Africa
    • Mediating history in a digital era
    • Human development and new ICTs
    • New media tools in politics, persuasion and electioneering
    • ICTs and Anti-Corruption Campaigns in Africa
    • Health Communication, ICTs and New Media in Africa
    • Old Media and New Media in Africa
    • Regulation of ICTs and new Media in Africa
    • Resistance, Activism and New Media Cultures in Africa
    • New Media Practices and Organisations in Africa
    • Journalism and Media Education in the Digital Age
    • From Audiences to Consumer-Producers
    • Mobile Phone Revolutions in Africa

    DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACTS

    The conference organizers welcome abstracts that feature high quality conceptual papers, as well as qualitative and quantitative empirical research papers. Abstracts from individuals including graduate students are welcome.

    The deadline for abstracts is Thursday 5 April 2012. Successful applicants will be notified by Monday 16 April 2012. Abstracts should be 300 words long. They must include the presenter's name, affiliation, email and postal address, together with the title of the paper. Please send abstracts to Helen Cohen at journalism@westminster.ac.uk

    PROGRAMMES AND REGISTRATION

    This one day conference will take place on Friday 15 June 2012. The fee for registration (which applies to all participants, including presenters) will be £95 with a concessionary rate of £45 for students, to cover all conference documentation, refreshments and administration costs. Registration will open in April 2012.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: journalism@westminster.ac.uk

    For submissions: journalism@westminster.ac.uk

    Website: http://www.westminster.ac.uk/research/a-z/africa-media-centre

  • Call for Papers: Woman and Film in Africa Conference (University of Westminister, UK)

    Deadline: 16 September 2011

    Women and Film in Africa Conference: Overcoming Social Barriers, Conference organised by the Africa Media Centre, University of Westminster, Date: Saturday 19 and Sunday 20 November 2011, Venue: University of Westminster, Marylebone Campus 35 Marylebone Road, London, NW1 5LS

    This is a 1st Call for Papers for a conference on the contemporary and historical role played by women in the film, television and video industries in Africa. From the Arab North Africa, West Africa, Central and East Africa, through to Southern Africa, women have emerged from the double oppression of patriarchy and colonialism to become the unsung heroines of the moving image as producers, directors,actresses, script writers, financiers, promoters, marketers and distributors of film, television and video in postcolonial Africa. Sadly, such immense contributions by women are underrepresented, both in industry debates and in academic research. There are now many cases in which African women in front of and behind the camera have overcome social barriers and yet this is sidelined. This conference invites students, practitioners, academics and researchers to debate how women have contributed to film, television and video markets in Africa from pre-colonial, colonial to postcolonial periods. Existing industry and academic work should also discuss the ways female audiences in Africa have engaged with film, television and video texts. The conference will include a session with leading female filmmakers. Papers may include, but are not necessarily limited to, the following themes:

    * The Influence of Feminism on African filmmakers;* Women in front and behind the camera in African film;* Women in the African feature film industry;* Women in technical roles in film, video and television in Africa;* Women documentary makers in Africa;* Gender and Representation of Women in African film;* Audiences for films by African women/Female audiences in Africa;* Case histories of leading African women film makers;* Women scriptwriters;* African women acting in video, film and television;* Censorship and the portrayal of African women in film and television;* The role of NGOs in commissioning women filmmakers and issue-based films;* How African governments have helped or hindered filmmaking by African women

    DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACTS

    The deadline for submission of abstracts is Friday 16 September, 2011. Successful applicants will be notified by Friday 23 September, 2011. Abstracts should be 200 words long. They must include the title of the conference, presenter’s name, affiliation, email and postal address,together with the title of the paper. Please ensure when saving your abstract that your name is part of the file name. Please email your abstract to Helen Cohen, Events Administrator at: (journalism@westminster.ac.uk).

    PROGRAMME AND REGISTRATION

    This two day conference will take place on Saturday 19 and Sunday 20 November, 2011. The fee for registration (which applies to all participants, including presenters) will be £135, with a concessionary rate of £55 for students, to cover all conference documentation, refreshments and administration costs. Registration will open in September 2011

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: journalism@westminster.ac.uk

    For submissions: journalism@westminster.ac.uk

    Website: http://www.wmin.ac.uk/

  • Call for Papers: Women and Photography in the Arab World (Al-Raida Journal)

    Deadline: 30 May 2012

    Photography has been traditionally used to document, record and preserve traces of the past such as in passports, permits and family albums. It has also been used as evidence in police work and courtrooms. Recent scholars have been interested in photography not as a record of reality but rather to understand its social function and the role photography has played in regulating modern societies through its various modes of representation. Photographic visuality can be fraught with meaning. For example, photography can be a platform to analyze the problems of working in a culture in which the feminine is defined as object for the masculine gaze. Moreover, signs of modernity, sexuality and patriarchy, to cite a few, can be identified in photographs to reveal gender, social and racial issues within a particular community. Not only can photography provide evidence for the presence of women in salient historical and social events but it can also serve as a means to analyze representation strategies and to examine complex gender relations in a particular context. Furthermore, photography can be read as a medium that empowers women by representing them as subjects/agents contrary to the broader representations of women as passive objects in photographs.

    This special issue of Al-Raida on Women & Photography in the Arab World seeks papers addressing photography as a medium that challenges assumed gender roles/positions/attributes as seen in the media. It seeks contributions that examine the practice of women photographers in the Arab region as well as how women are represented in the photographs from a variety of perspectives and disciplines including arts, photo-journalism, history, anthropology, the social sciences, and cultural studies.

    SUGGESTED TOPICS INCLUDE, BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO:

    • Re-inventing “women” through photography
    • The female as object/subject in the photograph
    • Seeing through a woman’s lens
    • Female authorship and subjectivity
    • Female identity and the construction of self-image through photography
    • Photography and feminism
    • Visual autobiography through family albums (analog or digital)
    • Photography and the archive
    • Photography and memory
    • Photography and its relationship to the public and the private
    • Female desire reflected in photographs

    SUBMISSION PROCEDURE

    Complete manuscripts should be prepared in English in MS Word and adhere to the Submission Guidelines they should be 6000-8000 words, including notes and references. Papers should be accompanied by an abstract of 300 words. The manuscript must contain a separate title page that should include: the title of the manuscript; the name(s) and affiliation(s) of the author(s); full contact details of the author(s); the author's brief biographical statement. All papers will be subject to anonymous double peer review following submission. Authors will be provided with feedback from the editorial committee to assist them in the further development of their scholarly work.

    Please send your submission as an e-mail attachment to the issue editor, Yasmine Nashabe at the following address: ynachabe@gmail.com and to the managing editor, Ms. Myriam Sfeir, at myriam.sfeir@lau.edu.lb on or before 30 May, 2012.

    ABOUT THE JOURNAL

    Al-Raida is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed journal published twice yearly by the Institute for Women’s Studies in the Arab World (IWSAW) at the Lebanese American University (LAU). Al-Raida was the first of its kind in the Arab world appearing first in May 1976, 3 years after the founding of the first institute for women’s studies in the Arab world (IWSAW).

    Al-Raida publishes papers on topics across a wide range of academic disciplines that raise gender issues in historical and contemporary contexts. Through the research published, Al-Raida aims to create links across the conventional divides of scholarship and activism; "Western" and "Third World" feminisms; professionals and students; men and women.

    The journal seeks both multidisciplinary and cross-cultural perspectives, and invites submissions in the form of scholarly articles, student papers and literary pieces. Papers are considered for the originality of their contribution to knowledge. In addition to publishing peer-reviewed articles, Al-Raida will continue to publish experimental pieces, testimonials, interviews, short stories, poems, and photographic essays. The journal also publishes book reviews and review articles on recent scholarly publications in the field of women and gender studies.

    Articles must be based on original research or offer well grounded theoretical and methodological contributions. They must be written in a clear and concise style in English and they must not be under consideration by any other publication. The articles are submitted to a double blind peer reviewing process and must follow the style guidelines of the journal. All papers are double blind refereed and authors are provided with feedback from the editorial committee to assist them in the further development of their scholarly work.

    Link: submission guidelines

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For enquiries: contact the editors at al-raida@lau.edu.lb

    For submissions: email your papers to Yasmine Nashabe (ynachabe@gmail.com) and to the managing editor, Ms. Myriam Sfeir, at myriam.sfeir@lau.edu.lb

    Website: http://www.lau.edu.lb/centers-institutes/iwsaw/publications/al-raida/

  • Call for Papers: The African Women's Journal (July - December 2011 issue)

    Deadline: 31 July 2011

    As part of contributing to the African Women’s Decade (2010-2020) through provision of information on the themes of the Decade, the African Women’s Journal for July-December 2011 will focus on the theme: Women’s Education and Training in Africa.

    Call for Papers: The African Women's Journal (July-December 2011)

    THEME: Promoting Equal Opportunities for Women’s Access to Education and Training in Africa
    The Beijing Platform for Action stresses that education is one of the most powerful and effective tool for women’s empowerment in Africa. However, limited access to quality education and training opportunities continues to hinder women’s equal participation in decision making, leadership and also in positively contributing to development in their countries. This is despite the fact that equal access to education is considered one of the fundamental human rights by the United Nations since it adopted the Right to education (Article 26) in 1949. Efforts to attain equal access to education and training for boys and girls; men and women have not yet resulted in gender parity at all levels including in adult education programmes.

    As part of contributing to the African Women’s Decade (2010-2020) through provision of information on the themes of the Decade, the African Women’s Journal for July-December 2011 will focus on the theme: Women’s Education and Training in Africa.

    The Journal articles will focus on any of the following sub-themes:-

    · Strategies being used to attain equal access to education and training in African countries
    · The untold stories in the African continent: some unique examples of literacy programmes and innovations that are transforming the lives of women, their families, communities and societies
    · The role of adult and continuing education in boosting women’s empowerment and sustainable development in Africa
    · Galvanizing African governments to allocate sufficient resources for and monitor the implementation of educational reforms
    · From policy to practice: Expanding opportunities for women and girls’ education

    Guidelines:

    For those interested to submit articles, kindly send us an ABSTRACT of your article on or before 31st July, 2011. The abstract should be written in English or French and must not be more than 200 words.

    You will be notified if your abstract has been approved. Only writers with selected abstracts will be asked to submit full article, which must be written in English or French and should be between 800 to 2,000 words. The article also needs to be well researched with clear referencing. A guideline for referencing will be provided. We will also require pictures relating to the article. (NB: The picture will have to be in Jpeg format). Including a brief biographical note, contact information with a JPEG mug shot picture of yourself in high resolution. Deadline for submission of FULL ARTICLE will be 30th August, 2011.

    Please note the following key deadlines

    • Abstract should be submitted by 31st July, 2011
    • Full Article should be submitted by 30th August, 2011

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: admin@femnet.or.ke or communication@femnet.or.ke

    For submissions: admin@femnet.or.ke or communication@femnet.or.ke

    Website: http://www.femnet.or.ke/

  • Peter Drucker Challenge Essay Contest 2012 (worldwide)

    Deadline: 30 June 2012

    (Note: The contest is open to students, junior managers, and entrepreneurs from around the world who want to share their views on the changing structure and mindset of the workforce and the impact it will have on institutions and management.)

    The Drucker Challenge Essay contest, organized by Peter Drucker Society Europe and now in its 3rd year, is about to raise awareness among young people of the works and ideas of Peter Drucker and a management philosophy that puts the human being in its centre.

    Essays must have between 1.500 to 3.000 words and attempt to deploy your perspectives and experience that will be significant for an interested but primarily non-research oriented audience. Researchers are invited to participate in our «Call for papers», co-organized by Peter Drucker Society Europe and Management Research Review (Emerald Group Publishing).

    The title theme of this year's Drucker Challenge is «Reinventing Work, Reinventing Organization» - a hot topic that will also be discussed at the 4th Global Drucker Forum in the context of Capitalism 2.0.

    THEME & CONTEXT

    In 1947 General Motors asked its employees to take part in an essay contest with the title theme "Why I Like My Job" An astonishing 174,854 workers at GM answered the call and submitted their essays. Peter Drucker, who just a few years earlier had systematically studied the inner workings at General Motors and had thereby "invented" the discipline of management, was one of the five judges who evaluated the essays and eventually picked the 40 winners.

    Our jobs, i.e. the way we conduct our work and our overall concept of work have changed significantly, even dramatically since 1947. Peter Drucker anticipated and observed these changes - like the rise of the knowledge worker, the emergence of the entrepreneurial society, and the increasing need to "manage oneself" - and described them in detail in books like "Landmarks of Tomorrow" (1959), "The Age of Discontinuity" (1969), "Innovation and Entrepreneurship" (1985), "Management Challenges for the 21st Century" (1999), and "Managing in the Next Society" (2002).

    Once asked about his prescience, Peter Drucker famously replied: It is in this spirit that we ask you: What do YOU see?

    • How will the nature of work and the workforce look like a few years or decades from now?
    • Will we still have the traditional corporations with their hierarchies providing the workplace for millions?
    • How will SME’s be configured?
    • Will all workers ultimately become knowledge workers?
    • In which environment will knowledge workers conduct business? Still at a desk at the office, or rather from home? Will they work for one or for several companies and organizations - in a mixture of jobs and parallel careers?
    • What will drive and motivate knowledge workers of tomorrow? A good pay? Or perhaps passion and purpose?
    • To what extent will the traditional "employee society" evolve into an "entrepreneurial society"?
    • Which will be the impact of these structural changes on companies, corporations and organizations and how can they best adapt?
    • What role will social entrepreneurs and the non-profit sector play in the future? What regulatory power will governments and trade unions ideally have? And how will the education sector and, last but not least, business schools change - and indeed have to change - to address the challenges of tomorrow?

    Please note: You are not supposed to answer each and all of these questions, rather we invite you to draft a picture of how nature and organization of work will look like in the future and how a working life would have to look like so that it could bring value to you and others.

    GUIDELINES

    IMPORTANT DATES

    • June 30, 2012: Deadline for essay submission
    • Sept. 10, 2012: Authors of the winning essays will be notified about the Jury decision
    • Sept. 15, 2012: Winners List published
    • Nov. 15-16, 2012: 4th Global Drucker Forum

    SUBMISSION PROCEDURE
    • File Type: Word for Windows: pdf
    • Words: 1.500 - 3.000
    • Font: “Times New Roman” or “Arial”, size 12, single line spacing
    • Language: English
    • Submission System: Please use the Electronic Submission Page

    Depending on your respective background you can enter the essay contest in one of these two categories:

    • Students
    • Managers & Entrepreneurs

    Co-authorship is permitted.

    Please note the Drucker Challenge essay contest is geared towards a primarily non-research oriented audience (for research-based papers may we refer you to our "Academic Call for Papers". We suggest you write from your own background, experience and perspective, weaving together facts and figures with anecdotal evidence, and personal with general observations - similar to the way Peter Drucker himself used to write.

    If you want, you can also envision and describe a day-in-the-life in the not too distant future to highlight the changes in our perceptions and practice of work that are already at work and beginning to shape the world that's to come.

    JURY

    • Lynda Gratton will serve as Head of Jury in this year's Drucker Challenge. She is Professor of Management Practice at London Business School, founder of the Hot Spots Movement, and was ranked 12th on the Thinkers50 2011 list of the world’s top 50 business thinkers. Her new book "THE SHIFT. The future of work is already here" " is for those who are keen to take charge of the future of their work. Watch the video with Lynda in the Financial Times;
    • Deepa Prahalad Business strategist and consultant; author of “PREDICTABLE MAGIC: Unleash the Power of Design Strategy to Transform Your Business”
    • John Peters CEO, GSE Research Ltd; former Chief Executive at Emerald Group Publishing
    • Richard Brem Peter Drucker Society Europe, Project Manager Peter Drucker Challenge, coordinates the overall award program and facilitates the jury process.

    JUDGING

    There will be 3 rounds of judging. The jury process will be facilitated by Richard Brem, Drucker Challenge Project Manager.

    First Round

    During the First Round, a panel of curators will evaluate and attribute a score to each entrant’s Essay made up of scores based upon the below-listed criteria during the period beginning on July 1, 2012 and ending on August 2, 2012

    Judging criteria:

    A. Style, originality, passion for the theme
    B. Formal structure of the essay
    C. Logical coherence
    D. To what extent does the essay deal with Druckerian themes?
    E. How well does it address the theme of the 2012 contest?

    The thirty (30) Essay submissions that receive the highest overall scores will qualify for the Second Round.

    Second round

    The thirty Essay submissions will be evaluated and attributed a score in early September by a panel of curators based upon the above-listed criteria, each of equal weight. The ten (10) Essay submissions that receive the highest overall scores will qualify for the Final round.

    Final round

    The ten (10) entries that receive the highest overall scores will be selected as the “Finalists.” Further, the Finalist that receives the highest overall score in each category will be selected as the First Prize Winner. In early September, the ten Finalists will be selected and notified by email. If a Finalist does not respond to the notification attempt within 4 days, then an alternate Finalist will be selected from among all eligible entries received based on the judging criteria described herein. Further, First Prize Winners and runners-up warrant that they are able to attend the public announcement on November 15, 2012. If one of them is unable to attend an alternate Finalist may be selected from among all eligible entries received based on the judging criteria described herein.

    You can see a list of winners by mid-September, 2012, visiting www.druckerchallenge.org

    PRIZES

    Prizes are awarded to the two overall winners and the two runners-up in the two categories as well as up to 26 more winning papers. Depending on the quality and number of submissions, additional awards may be bestowed.

    The overall winners in the students and managers/entrepreneurs category will be awarded:

    • Money prize of € 1.000;
    • Publications of essays on druckerchallenge.org and partner media;
    • Free participation in the 4th Global Peter Drucker Forum on Nov. 15 - 16, 2012, including: participation in the Speakers reception on Nov. 14; all sessions and workshops on Nov 15 – 16; Gala Dinner on Nov 15 with awards ceremony; conference materials; lunch and coffee at the conference venue; up to three nights accommodation at the conference hotel; travel costs; an active role in a panel/workshop; Free membership to PDSA/PDSE in 2013

    The runners-up in the students and managers/entrepreneurs category will be awarded:
    • Publications of essays on druckerchallenge.org and partner media;
    • Free participation in the 4th Global Peter Drucker Forum on Nov. 15 - 16, 2012, including: participation in the Speakers reception on Nov. 14; all sessions and workshops on Nov 15 – 16; Gala Dinner on Nov 15 with awards ceremony; conference materials; lunch and coffee at the conference venue; 50% travel cost reimbursement; an active role in a panel/workshop; Free membership to PDSA/PDSE in 2013

    The authors of the winning papers Nr. 4 -10 will be awarded
    • Publications of essays on druckerchallenge.org
    • Free participation in the 4th Global Peter Drucker Forum on Nov. 15- 16, 2012, including: participation in the Speakers reception on Nov. 14; all sessions and workshops on Nov 15 – 16; Gala Dinner on Nov 15 with awards ceremony; conference materials; lunch and coffee at the conference venue; Free membership to PDSA/PDSE in 2013

    The authors of the winning papers Nr. 11 - 30 will be awarded
    • Free participation in the 4th Global Peter Drucker Forum on Nov.15 - 16, 2012, including: all sessions and workshops on Nov 15 – 16; Gala Dinner on Nov 15 with awards ceremony; conference materials; lunch and coffee at the conference venue

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: contact@druckersociety.eu

    For submissions: enter the contest via the electronic submissions page

    Website: http://www.druckerchallenge.org

  • Call for Papers: The Role of Translation and Interpreting in Language Development (South African Translators' Institute)

    Deadline: 13 April 2012

    South African Translators’ Institute
    Triennial Conference
    The Role of Translation and Interpreting
    in Language Development
    Date: Saturday 29 September 2012
    Venue: University of Johannesburg
    Second Call for Papers

    KEYNOTE SPEAKER:

    Professor Sihawu Ngubane
    Chairperson: Pan South African Language Board (PanSALB)
    “The Role of Translation and Interpreting in Language Development”

    PLENARY SPEAKERS:

    Ms Landela Nyangintsimbi
    Tshwane Metro Language Division
    The role of local government in language development
    Professor Nathi Ngcobo
    Department of Linguistics, University of South Africa

    The conference, which also celebrates International Translation Day 2012, includes the presentation of the prestigious SATI Prizes for Outstanding Translation and Dictionaries for 2012. These awards were introduced by SATI in 2000 as a means of promoting the publication of translated works in the South African official languages.

    We are delighted to announce that world renowned expert on editing Brian Mossop will run a workshop as part of the day’s proceedings.

    Parallel sessions will be held following the plenary addresses.

    We are most encouraged by the range of abstracts already received. Proposals will be accepted until 13 April 2012. Possible subjects include:

    ♦ How statutory requirements influence language development
    ♦ Government initiatives and support for language development
    ♦ Translation as an ideological tool
    ♦ The political dimensions of translation
    ♦ The practical intent of translation and interpreting
    ♦ Educational interpreting
    ♦ Translation in publishing
    ♦ Language development: The role of terminology and lexicography
    ♦ The marginalisation of translation and interpreting in contemporary South Africa

    Prospective contributors should submit their abstracts (500 words) (include contact details, a 150- word bio of the presenters, and the knowledge level of the participants you wish to address: basic, advanced or all participants) to seminar@translators.org.za. The conference language is English. The following formats are possible: Presentations (30 minutes, including time for questions) | Panel discussions (90 minutes) | Seminars (90 or 180 minutes) | Workshops (90 or 180 minutes).

    BACKGROUND TO THE CONFERENCE

    South Africa's multilingual dispensation is supported by language provisions in the Constitution, language legislation such as the Pan South African Language Board Act (1995), and government policy statements such as the Language-in-Education Policy (1997), the Language Policy for Higher Education (2002) and the National Language Policy Framework and its Implementation Plan (2003). Against this backdrop of enabling policy and statutory measures language development is clearly an important imperative for both government and the language professions and industry.

    The South African Translators’ Institute (SATI) is a well-established association that has been serving the translation and interpreting profession for more than 50 years. It has a code of conduct, self-regulation through a voluntary system of accreditation (in a broad range of languages), development projects (a bursary scheme to assist translation and interpreting students working in African languages; a prestigious translation prize awarded for outstanding published translations in the official languages) and involvement in forums and projects at national and international level such as the International Federation of Translators (the only translation association from Africa to serve on its governing body).

    SATI is still the only comprehensive non-profit professional organisation for language practitioners in South Africa, with some 800 members across the spectrum of language mediation activities such as translation, interpreting, text editing, terminology and lexicography. Also, whereas initially SATI’s members were translators working almost exclusively in English and Afrikaans, its focus has now shifted significantly and as a result its members are now representative of activities in some 50 languages, including all the official African languages and South African Sign Language, as well as other languages such as French, Portuguese, German, Dutch, Spanish, Arabic and Mandarin.

    The role of translation in the development of languages and literatures has been well documented by, among others, Toury (1995), Cronin (1995) and Woodsworth (1996). However, the same does not apply to the South African context, notwithstanding that the translation and interpreting profession has made and will undoubtedly continue to make important contributions in these areas. In addition to being tools to facilitate communication, translation and interpreting also serve as pivotal language development tools in the sense that they create ‘discursive space’ and grow socio-cultural domains for ‘lesser used’ languages. The developmental capacity of translation and interpreting manifests, among other things, in the growth and elaboration of corpora by introducing new registers and linguistic items (also through the labour of terminologists and lexicographers) and ultimately the introduction of new genres (both literary and non-literary) and discourses. Since language development is essentially a transformational activity, translation and interpreting are also important reconciliatory tools in promoting tolerance, understanding and mutual respect in expanding and consolidating democracy.

    Much work is being done in this field, but much remains to be done. As regards government’s obligations, the conspicuous absence of the proposed South African Languages Act and the South African Language Practitioners’ Council Act is of particular concern to stakeholders across the board. It has been argued that language policy implementation has become trapped in the gap between ‘intention’ and ‘performance’, also as far as the provision of translation and interpreting infrastructure is concerned. It seems as if the translation and interpreting profession has been marginalised and its beneficial language development and empowering role ignored.

    The SA Translators’ Institute, as one of the key actors in the language professions and industries in South Africa, invites researchers and members of these and related disciplines and industries to submit proposals for presentations, panel discussions, seminars or workshops on the conference theme. There will be several parallel sessions following the plenary presentations, with the themes dependent on the proposals submitted.

    Questions and queries? Contact the SATI Office at seminar@translators.org.za or 011 803 2681.

    Late submissions will be accepted up to 13 April 2012. Submit abstracts (500 words) to seminar@translators.org.za. The conference language is English. The following formats are possible:

    ♦ Presentations (30 minutes, including time for questions)
    ♦ Panel discussions (90 minutes)
    ♦ Seminars (90 or 180 minutes)
    ♦ Workshops (90 or 180 minutes)

    KEY DATES:

    • Deadline for submissions: 13 April 2012
    • Submissions informed of acceptance: 30 April
    • Provisional programme published: 31 May 2012
    • Early Bird registrations open: 1 May 2012
    • Late registrations open: 1 July 2012
    • Submission of full version of papers for inclusion
    • in conference proceedings: 31 August 2012
    • Final programme published: 1 September 2012

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: seminar@translators.org.za

    For submissions: seminar@translators.org.za

    Website: http://translators.org.za

  • KARAMAH: Call for Papers on Muslim Women’s Leadership

    Deadline: 23 March 2012

    KARAMAH: Muslim Women Lawyers for Human Rights is issuing a call for papers on the topic of “Women’s Leadership in Islam”, welcoming a wide range of article submissions in the fields of history, religion, sociology, anthropology, gender studies, and others.

    Islamic notions about women and their roles in society have caused much debate both amongst Muslim scholars and practitioners, as well as secular commentators on Islam. Although women throughout Islamic history have assumed a wide variety of leadership roles in society– from scholars to sultans to merchants to mothers to warriors– the question of women’s leadership persists. KARAMAH seeks to further develop the scholarship on this topic and to broaden its scope, focusing on (though not limited to) the following themes:

    (1) women in the Qur’an: their status, roles, and stories;

    (2) prominent women in Islamic history and their leadership roles;

    (3) barriers to women’s leadership, including cultural notions of women’s roles in society and differing interpretations of Prophetic traditions;

    (4) women’s role in reshaping their nations, such as during the Arab Spring;

    (5) contemporary Muslim women leaders (not limited to political leaders); and

    (6) the legitimacy of women’s leadership, whether religious, political, or professional.

    Papers will be accepted up to 5,000 words, and should be electronically submitted as double-spaced Word documents.

    Please submit papers to avajid@karamah.org no later March 23.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: avajid@karamah.org

    For submissions: avajid@karamah.org

    Website: http://www.karamah.org

  • Call for Papers: Children’s Literature from the Commonwealth of Nations

    Deadline: 15 May 2012

    Submissions are invited for a Special Issue of Bookbird in conjunction with the Commonwealth Education Trust (CET). The CET has promoted education, literacy and literature throughout the member states of the Commonwealth of Nations for 125 years. Their work has much in common with IBBY. Papers are invited on the literatures of Commonwealth countries, as well as on literacy education, the development of the imagination and critical thinking through reading, and other practical uses of literature. Papers of 4000 words are invited on, but not limited to, the following topics:

    · National identity in literature for children and teens

    · Literacy programmes which incorporate children’s literature

    · Thematic developments in national literatures

    · Indigenous and diasporic literatures for children

    · Multilingual children’s literature

    · The impact of colonization and/or Empire on national literatures for children

    · The oral tradition and/or literary retellings

    · Trends in illustration techniques

    · Prizes for children’s literature

    · Non-fiction publishing for children and teens

    Titles and abstracts of 250 words should be sent to the editor by 15th May 2012 - Roxanne Harde rharde@ualberta.ca

    The full papers will be expected by 30th June 2012. Please see Bookbird’s website at www.ibby.org/bookbird for full submission details.

    In addition, short reviews of recently published children’s literature (c.a. 300 words) or of research on children’s literature (c.a. 750 words) are warmly welcomed.

    Papers which are not accepted for this issue will be considered for later issues of Bookbird.

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries/submissions: contact Roxanne Harde at rharde@ualberta.ca

    Website: www.ibby.org/bookbird

  • Call for Papers: Dis/connects: African Studies in the Digital Age (UK)

    Deadline: 31 October 2011

    The digital revolution is profoundly affecting African studies. New digital resources are making available large areas of content, as well as greatly improving access to bibliographies. In Africa, governments and NGOs are publishing online, some publishers are moving to print on demand and e-books, and international academic journals are increasingly becoming available in university and national libraries.

    Yet the story, as is well-known, is far from straightforward or unproblematic. This conference will mark the 50th anniversary of the founding of SCOLMA by taking a critical look at the field of African studies and how it is changing. In particular, although there has been much discussion of new digital resources and what their creators plan to do, we have a limited understanding of their impact on their users and on knowledge production in general. For example, what are the implications for historical research of the availability of digitised sources, and of the choices made in their selection? How do social science researchers work in a field in which much, but not everything, is now available online? Are e-journals – or indeed mobile phones – beginning to change the research process in Africa? And, more generally, how have broader historical and political developments changed African studies and librarianship over the last half-century?

    We welcome papers on these themes across the humanities, arts, social sciences and sciences. Papers may deal with digital content, whether digitised or born-digital, of any kind, e.g. archives and manuscripts; audio-visual material; maps; newspapers; books, journals and theses; photographs, prints, drawings and paintings; ephemera; statistical databases; and social media.

    The conference will bring together academics and other researchers with librarians and archivists. We aim thus to have a productive exchange of expertise, experience and analysis on the question of knowledge production in African studies.

    Themes may include, but are not limited to: • How scholars, researchers, librarians and archivists use digitised resources. • How African studies is changing, and the place of the digital revolution in these changes. • Access to, selection of, and training in the use of digital resources in the library context. Are resources under-used? • To pay or not to pay? How easy is it for researchers to find subscription e-resources? And for libraries to fund them? What is the balance of free and charged resources in the research process? How well do the models for making e-resources available in Africa work? • How well does user consultation work? • Access to the technology that underpins e-resources. • Digital scholarship: are scholars in African studies using digital collections to generate new intellectual products? • The impact of mobile phone technology on African studies. • How patchy is the creation of digital resources, and what – and who – is being left behind? • Language in Africa and new technology.

    One-page abstracts of papers on these themes are warmly welcomed. If you would like to give a paper, please send your abstract to

    Lucy McCann SCOLMA Secretary Email: lucy.mccann@bodleian.ox.ac.uk. Tel.: 01865 270908

    THE DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACTS IS 31 OCTOBER 2011.

    Papers in French are welcome if a summary is provided in English.

    SCOLMA: The UK Libraries and Archives Group on Africa
    50th ANNIVERSARY CONFERENCE
    Dis/connects: African Studies in the Digital Age
    Oxford, 25–26 June 2012

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: lucy.mccann@bodleian.ox.ac.uk

    For submissions: lucy.mccann@bodleian.ox.ac.uk

    Website: http://www2.lse.ac.uk/library/scolma/

  • Call for Papers: Global Shakespeare

    Deadline: 30 September 2011

    Research articles in this issue will take stock of the worldwide histories of performance and criticism to uncover any blind spots in current methodologies to study the theoretical and artistic implications of Shakespeare and the cultures of diaspora, the U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Commonwealth countries, Europe, Russia, Africa, the Arab world, Asia, Latin America and elsewhere.

    CALL FOR PAPERS

    Shakespeare: Journal of British Shakespeare Association special issue

    "Global Shakespeare"

    The special issue welcomes papers on Shakespeare in performance in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries that participate in or initiate debates—theory, praxis, reception—worldwide. During his lifetime, Shakespeare’s plays were performed in Europe and subsequently taken to remote corners of the globe, including Sierra Leone, Socotra, and colonial Indonesia. Performances in England also had a global flair. European visitors such as Thomas Platter witnessed the plays on stage at the Globe (1599) and left behind diary records. Four centuries on, there has been a sea change. In theatre, Shakespeare has been recruited, exemplified, resisted, and debated in post/colonial encounters, in the international avant-garde led by Ariane Mnouchkine, Ninagawa Yukio, Peter Brook, Tadashi Suzuki, and others, and in the circuits of global politics and tourism in late capitalist societies.

    As artists reconstruct various traditions, critics are also troubling narrowly defined concept of cultural authenticity. What are the new paradigms that can help us avoid replicating the old author-centered textuality in performance criticism? What critical resources might we bring to the task of interpreting the behaviors and signs in performance? What is the role of local and global spectators? More importantly, what is the task of criticism as it deals with the transformations of Shakespeare and various performance idioms?

    In addition, this issue will also feature a section devoted to recent adaptations in English and other languages.

    We invite two types of submissions --

    • Research article: criticism (5,000-8,000 words)
    • Short performance reviews (1,000-2,000 words)

    Please follow the Journal's Instructions for Authors here. Submissions--WORD (.doc) file, double-spaced, 12-point font; no .docx files please--or queries to be emailed to Alex Huang at the following address: acyhuang@gwu.edu

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: acyhuang@gwu.edu

    For submissions: acyhuang@gwu.edu

    Website: http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/journal.asp?issn=1745-0918

  • Call for Papers: Society of Movie Scholars' International Conference (Nigeria)

    Deadline: 1 August 2011

    SOCIETY OF MOVIE SCHOLARS (SoMS) in collaboration with NATIONAL FILM AND VIDEO CENSORS BOARD (NFVCB) and ASSOCIATION OF NIGERIA THEATRE ARTS PRACTTIONERS (ANTP) INVITES THE GENERAL PUBLIC TO THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE THEORIZATION AND CLASSIFICATION OF AFRICAN REGIONAL MOVIES

    Background

    African movies across its regions have grown to the extent that there is need to critically do their in-depth studies with the purpose of generating theories on their packaging, analysis and proper classification into genres. Most movies produced in Africa are packaged without recourse to definite theories. Broadly speaking, most of the movies can be categorized into three groups namely, cultural or epic; modern and religious movies. While the religious and cultural movies could be in local or foreign languages, modern movies are so described because they are often located in the context of urban or rural populace and are produced in foreign or local languages, treating themes bothering on modern issues. But where they are in local languages, they are often lazed with Pidgin English or code mixed. However, these groupings possess the tendency to overlap if these categories are to be retained. Thus, it is difficult to arrogate to these groupings as genres on their own, more so that these grading are not guided by definite theories.

    To define these groups effectively therefore, it might be necessary to do a close survey of their constituents. This is when the components can be highlighted into specific genres for stimulating and rich academic exercise. It is expected as the outcome of the exercise that specialization, originality and scope-widening and thus further ground for employment creation and legitimacy of production and its development would be engendered. Then practitioners’ specializations on specific genres would increase, and the tendency to recycle old ideas for new creations would be reduced.

    This conference is therefore organized with the intent of gathering interested scholars and practitioners within and outside Africa to rub minds so as to evolve specific theories of packaging, analysis, and map out what genres African movies could be grouped. Taking a leap from the fact that movies are audio-visualisation of literature and literary texts and are analysed based on definite theories, the objective therefore is to cut a niche for African movies like literature, and place them strategically in the world movie categorizations but based on African development ideals and thus globalise what hitherto were local mediations.

    CALL FOR PAPERS

    In view of the above, abstracts are invited from academics, media industry professionals, movie producers, distributors, government agencies, policymakers, movie regulators, agencies, donors, civil society organisations, independent consultants, research groups and students, on any aspects of the under listed sub-themes. Such abstracts which should not exceed 200 words should be based on the analysis of select movies that fall within the sub-themes. This would eventually argue out the basis for specified theories and why the movie should be classified within the genres that the scholar is advocating. Contributors should however not forget to state under which sub-theme they are submitting their abstract.

    Abstracts are to be sent to our E-mail address: moviescholars@gmail.com on or before August 1st 2011, while full paper must reach us before September 1st, 2011.

    Sub-themes

    Below are the likely, but by no means the only sub-themes on which abstracts can be submitted.

    1. Trends in movie Theories.
    2. Existing Literary Theories and the need or not, for distinct African movie theories.
    3. Generating theories on African movies.
    4. Emergent genres in African movies.
    5. Movies and the relevance of African-specific genres.
    6. Classifying African urban and rural movies.
    7. Gender and social issues in African movies, need for classical genrization.
    8. War and crime movies and proper classification.
    9. Travel movies and issues of depiction.
    10. African movies and the global media culture.
    11. Representation of economic, social and political issues in African movies
    12. Africans’ contributions to the Theories of Gaze.
    13. Sociology and Psychology of African movies.

    Proposals should include abstract title, author's name, address, telephone number, email address, and institutional affiliation.

    Conference fee: A non-refundable registration fee of N10, 000 or (USD 200, BP100 for participants from the US, Europe, and other African countries). This must be paid immediately when an abstract is accepted. It is expected that all participants will raise the funding to attend the conference please.

    LEAD PAPER: Professor Ahmed Yerima, Head of Department, Department of Theatre and Performing Arts, Kwara State University Malete Kwara State (Title of Paper: African Movies: The needs for unique identities)

    GUEST OF HONOUR: Emeka Mba, Director General, National Film and Video Censors Board, Abuja

    KEY NOTE ADDRESS: Comrade Victor Ashaolu, National President, Association of Nigeria Theatre Arts Practitioners, National Theatre, Lagos

    Conference Dates:

    • Arrival- October 24th, 2011
    • Opening and plenary sessions 25th--27th October, 2011
    Venue: Osun State University, Osogbo; Nigeria.

    Enquiries:

    For more details, please visit the website: www.moviescholars.org OR contact any of the following:

    *Kayode Animasaun, PhD: Osun State University, Ikire Campus, Ikire. Chairman LOC: +2348073787551, drkayanimasaun@gmail.com

    *Gloria Ernest-Samuel, Imo State University Owerri- Secretary. LOC: +2348035085625, gloimsu@yahoo.com

    *Ameh Akoh PhD H.O.D Languages and Linguistics Department, Osun State University, Ikire Campus, Ikire- Convener : +2348035992490, amehakoh@yahoo.co.uk

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: drkayanimasaun@gmail.com

    For submissions: moviescholars@gmail.com

    Website: http://www.moviescholars.org/

  • Deadline May 15 | Call for Contributions - Bookbird: A Journal of International Children's Literature (Commonwealth nations)

    Deadline: 15 May 2012

    We invite submissions for a Special Issue of Bookbird in conjunction with the Commonwealth Education Trust (CET). The CET has promoted education, literacy and literature throughout the member states of the Commonwealth of Nations for 125 years. Their work has much in common with IBBY. Papers are invited on the literatures of Commonwealth countries, as well as on literacy education, the development of the imagination and critical thinking through reading, and other practical uses of literature. Papers of 4000 words are invited on, but not limited to, the following topics:

    • National identity in literature for children and teens
    • Literacy programmes which incorporate children’s literature
    • Thematic developments in national literatures
    • Indigenous and diasporic literatures for children
    • Multilingual children’s literature
    • The impact of colonization and/or Empire on national literatures for children
    • The oral tradition and/or literary retellings
    • Trends in illustration techniques
    • Prizes for children’s literature
    • Non-fiction publishing for children and teens

    Titles and abstracts of 250 words should be sent to both editors by 15th May 2012: Roxanne Harde rharde@augustana.ca and Lydia Kokkola lydia.kokkola@utu.fi

    The full papers will be expected by 30th June 2012. Please see Bookbird’s website at www.ibby.org/bookbird for full submission details.

    In addition, short reviews of recently published children’s literature (c.a. 300 words) or of research on children’s literature (c.a. 750 words) are warmly welcomed.

    Papers which are not accepted for this issue will be considered for later issues of Bookbird.

    Bookbird: A Journal of International Children's Literature (ISSN 0006 7377) is a refereed journal published quarterly by IBBY

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: Harde rharde@augustana.ca or Lydia Kokkola lydia.kokkola@utu.fi

    For submissions: titles and abstracts of 250 words should be sent to both editors by 15th May 2012: Roxanne Harde rharde@augustana.ca and Lydia Kokkola lydia.kokkola@utu.fi

    Website: http://www.ibby.org/bookbird

  • Call for Contributions - Bookbird: A Journal of International Children's Literature (Commonwealth nations)

    Deadline: 15 May 2012

    We invite submissions for a Special Issue of Bookbird in conjunction with the Commonwealth Education Trust (CET). The CET has promoted education, literacy and literature throughout the member states of the Commonwealth of Nations for 125 years. Their work has much in common with IBBY. Papers are invited on the literatures of Commonwealth countries, as well as on literacy education, the development of the imagination and critical thinking through reading, and other practical uses of literature. Papers of 4000 words are invited on, but not limited to, the following topics:

    • National identity in literature for children and teens
    • Literacy programmes which incorporate children’s literature
    • Thematic developments in national literatures
    • Indigenous and diasporic literatures for children
    • Multilingual children’s literature
    • The impact of colonization and/or Empire on national literatures for children
    • The oral tradition and/or literary retellings
    • Trends in illustration techniques
    • Prizes for children’s literature
    • Non-fiction publishing for children and teens

    Titles and abstracts of 250 words should be sent to both editors by 15th May 2012: Roxanne Harde rharde@augustana.ca and Lydia Kokkola lydia.kokkola@utu.fi

    The full papers will be expected by 30th June 2012. Please see Bookbird’s website at www.ibby.org/bookbird for full submission details.

    In addition, short reviews of recently published children’s literature (c.a. 300 words) or of research on children’s literature (c.a. 750 words) are warmly welcomed.

    Papers which are not accepted for this issue will be considered for later issues of Bookbird.

    Bookbird: A Journal of International Children's Literature (ISSN 0006 7377) is a refereed journal published quarterly by IBBY

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: Harde rharde@augustana.ca or Lydia Kokkola lydia.kokkola@utu.fi

    For submissions: titles and abstracts of 250 words should be sent to both editors by 15th May 2012: Roxanne Harde rharde@augustana.ca and Lydia Kokkola lydia.kokkola@utu.fi

    Website: http://www.ibby.org/bookbird

  • Call for Artists/ Theatre Poets - Disability and Citizenship: From Visions to Action (Zimbabwe)

    Deadline: 31 July 2012

    (Note: Aside from academic papers, the organizers are seeking proposals from artists and theatre poets who would like to participate/ present in the conference.)

    Call for papers and proposals: ‘Disability’ and Citizenship - ‘From visions to action’

    Conference Date: 9- 11 October 2012

    Venue: University of Zimbabwe

    University of Zimbabwe and its partners invites academics, students, researchers, professionals, artists, civil society and policy makers to present academic and/or policy related papers, posters, workshops and performances on disability and citizenship. In recognition of the fact that contemporary conceptions of citizenship centre around notions of human rights, responsibilities and ‘active’ participation in all spheres of human endeavours, this special conference is called to conceptualise/theorise, contextualise and proffer practical suggestions on negotiating ‘disability’ related challenges.

    Cognisant of the fact that people with ‘disabilities’ have generally been perceived as marginalised and excluded from major social, political, economic and cultural practices, the conference seeks to further interrogate major barriers to the full participation of people with disabilities as citizens and to explore practical strategies of addressing identified issues and problems. We therefore encourage innovative insights and practices in the following conference thematic areas.

    1. Disability, political participation and citizenship
    2. Disability, law and citizenship
    3. Media, disability and citizenship
    4. Disability and student activism
    5. Performance and Disability
    6. Literature: metaphors and symbols of Disability
    7. Sport, recreation and Disability: politics of participation
    8. Visual Arts, disability and citizenship
    9. Religion/spirituality and citizenship: past, present and future.
    10. Disability, discourse/rhetoric and the politics of language
    11. Education/critical pedagogy and disability
    12. Historical/cultural narratives of disability: implications on citizenship
    13. Disability research: politics of inclusion and exclusion
    14. Medical science, disability and citizenship
    15. The politics of the body and disability activism
    16. Space and Environment: barriers and possibilities to participation
    17. Disability, employment and the politics of empowerment
    18. Gender, disability and politics of participation

    Important information

    • Presentations at the conference are encouraged and welcome in the following formats: academic/policy papers, posters, performances/workshops and visual exhibitions/displays. University and college students will have a special forum in which they will present
    • All Proposals and Abstracts should be sent to nmuwonwa@gmail.com
    • Abstracts should not exceed 300 words
    • Visual displays (e.g. posters, short films, sculpture, electronic images)
    • Workshops/ Performances - (e .g, dance, music, theatre poetry)

    Conference Products

    1) Reviewed papers will be published in a journal.
    2) Policy Proposals will be presented to relevant organisations

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries/ submissions: nmuwonwa@gmail.com

    Website: http://www.uz.ac.zw/

  1. Job Opening: News Editor for Mail & Guardian Online (South Africa)
  2. Job Opening: Network/ News Editor for Internews (Sudan)
  3. Open to Women Journalists Worldwide: Elizabeth Neuffer Fellowship
  4. 2011 The African Network Annual Awards for Excellence in HIV /AIDS Communication in Africa
  5. Call for Journalists: Kenya Tourism Media Awards (print and digital media/ blog)