Gen 092021
 

The 21st International Conference on

“Science, technologies and policies to innovate spatial planning”

STP4P_2021

in conjunction with

The 2021 International Conference on Computational
Science and its Applications (ICCSA 2021)
September 13th – 16th 2021

Cagliari,
http://www.iccsa.org/

 

Description

The need of innovating approaches, techniques and implementation mechanisms in spatial planning are required by the changing and increasing numbers and types of pressures that socio-ecological systems have to face.
Particularly, cities represent crucial system where often the negative impacts of different processes (both natural or anthropogenic) cumulate.
Science is required to generate knowledge useful to society to tackle and solve these impacts, but barriers still exist to knowledge exchange between knowledge generators and knowledge users. There is a dire need for additional research on how to bridge the theory-practice gap and identifying characteristics of research that enable new knowledge, techniques and policies to be concretely transferred and used not only in spatial planning but also in technical instruments.
Moreover, in the recent years a numbers of “new” planning tools had been produced in the framework of mainstream global policies: i.e. energy efficiency, climate adaptation, low carbon economy. Such tools, sometimes operates in competition with traditional urban and territorial plans, in other cases stimulated positive interactions, in some applications had been recognised as a way to overcome traditional gaps of comformative planning practices towards performance based approaches. SECAP, SEAP, Climate adaptation strategies, ITIs, Urban Resilience plan, etc. represent a system of planning tools that are currently changing cities, and territories around Europe. Such “spontaneous” (as not compulsory for territorial administrations according with national normative framework) planning tools are far from be organized in a rational framework in order to assess their contribution in generating better urban transformation, but are representative of a diffuse demand for planning toward which the innovation of planning system should be oriented.
The STP4P workshop welcomes contributions aimed at proposing novel methods and visions, theoretical approaches and case studies of innovative planning process. Focus of contributions may include (but is not limited):
–       emerging science and concepts;
–       new techniques to support and enable planning choices;
–       innovative policies and normative instruments;
–        emerging strategies to connect natural and anthropogenic processes;
–       emerging urban trends to enhance the dynamic synergies between the material and immaterial data of a city (big data, IoT/IoE, sensor networks, blockchain, etc.)
–       spontaneous planning on emerging instances (SECAP, SEAP, Climate adaptation strategies, ITIs, Urban Resilience plan, etc.)
Given the focus of the Conference on Computational Science issues, the STP4P  workshop welcomes contributions on ICT, spatial planning, and computational aspects, proposals and applications from a wide variety of scholars on the issues proposed. Engineers, Urban and Regional Planners, Architects, Geographers and Environmental Engineers, among others are welcome to contribute.

 

Keywords: Socio-ecological systems, Spatial Plannning, Emerging science, Innovation, spatial planning, ICT, urban governance, smart cities, urban and regional growth, Cultural Heritage, urban and regional planning; natural and anthropogenic processes; Open Data, Big Data.

Each paper will be independently reviewed by 3 programme committee members. Their individual scores will be evaluated by a small sub-committee and result in one of the following final decisions: accepted, or accepted on the condition that suggestions for improvement will be incorporated, or rejected. Notification of this decision will take place on April 2021.
Individuals and groups should submit complete papers (10 to 16 pages).
Accepted contributions will be published in the Springer-Verlag Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) volumes

 

Authors Guideline
Please adhere strictly to the formatting provided in the template to prepare your paper and refrain from modifying it. The submitted paper must be camera-ready and formatted according to the rules of LNCS. For formatting information, see the publisher’s web site (http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0). Submission implies the willingness of at least one of the authors to register and present the paper.

download the template

 

Submission
Papers should be submitted at: http://ess.iccsa.org/
Please don’t forget to select “Science, technologies and policies to innovate spatial planning” –  STP4P_2021)” workshop from the drop-down list of all workshops.

 

Proceedings
Papers accepted to “STP4P 2021” will be published in the ICCSA Conference proceedings, in Springer-Verlag Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series, with doi, indexed by WOS, Scopus and DBLP.

 

Important dates

28 May 2021: Deadline for full paper submission
6 June 2021: Notification of acceptance
21 June 2021: Early-bird registration ends
28 June 2021: Deadline for Camera Ready Papers
13-16 September, 2021ICCSA 2021 Conference

 

 

Organizers Information:

Chiara Garau, (DICAAR, University of Cagliari)
Daniele La Rosa, (DICAR, University of Catania)
Francesco Scorza, (University of Basilicata)
Anna Maria Colavitti, (DICAAR, University of Cagliari)
Beniamino Murgante, (University of Basilicata)
Paolo La Greca, (DICAR, University of Catania)

 

 

Scientific Committee:

Federico Amato, University of Basilicata, Italy

Alessandro Aurigi, University of Plymouth, United Kingdom

Margherita Azzari, University of Florence, Italy

Giuseppe Borruso, University of Trieste

Anna Maria Colavitti, University of Cagliari

Tanja Congiu, University of Sassari, Italy

Federico Cugurullo,  Trinity College of Dublin

Chiara Garau, University of Cagliari, Italy

Daniele La Rosa, University of Catania, Italy

Beniamino Murgante, University of Basilicata, Italy

Oana Ramona Ilovan, University of Babes-Bolyai, Romania

Enrica Papa, University of Westminster, London, United Kingdom

Alessandro Plaisant, University of Sassari, Italy

Francesco Scorza, University of Basilicata, Italy

Anastasia Stratigea,  University of Athens – NTUA

Katharine Willis, University of Plymouth, United Kingdom

Claudia Yamu, University of Groningen

Paola Zamperlin, University of Florence, Italy

Corrado Zoppi, University of Cagliari, Italy

Nov 192019
 

 

The 20th International Conference on

“Science, technologies and policies to innovate spatial planning”

STP4P_2020

in conjunction with

The 2020 International Conference on Computational
Science and its Applications (ICCSA 2020)
July 1st – July 4th 2020

Cagliari,
http://www.iccsa.org/

 

Description

The need of innovating approaches, techniques and implementation mechanisms in spatial planning are required by the changing and increasing numbers and types of pressures that socio-ecological systems have to face.
Particularly, cities represent crucial system where often the negative impacts of different processes (both natural or anthropogenic) cumulate.
Science is required to generate knowledge useful to society to tackle and solve these impacts, but barriers still exist to knowledge exchange between knowledge generators and knowledge users. There is a dire need for additional research on how to bridge the theory-practice gap and identifying characteristics of research that enable new knowledge, techniques and policies to be concretely transferred and used not only in spatial planning but also in technical instruments.
Moreover, in the recent years a numbers of “new” planning tools had been produced in the framework of mainstream global policies: i.e. energy efficiency, climate adaptation, low carbon economy. Such tools, sometimes operates in competition with traditional urban and territorial plans, in other cases stimulated positive interactions, in some applications had been recognised as a way to overcome traditional gaps of comformative planning practices towards performance based approaches. SECAP, SEAP, Climate adaptation strategies, ITIs, Urban Resilience plan, etc. represent a system of planning tools that are currently changing cities, and territories around Europe. Such “spontaneous” (as not compulsory for territorial administrations according with national normative framework) planning tools are far from be organized in a rational framework in order to assess their contribution in generating better urban transformation, but are representative of a diffuse demand for planning toward which the innovation of planning system should be oriented.
The STP4P workshop welcomes contributions aimed at proposing novel methods and visions, theoretical approaches and case studies of innovative planning process. Focus of contributions may include (but is not limited):
–       emerging science and concepts;
–       new techniques to support and enable planning choices;
–       innovative policies and normative instruments;
–        emerging strategies to connect natural and anthropogenic processes;
–       emerging urban trends to enhance the dynamic synergies between the material and immaterial data of a city (big data, IoT/IoE, sensor networks, blockchain, etc.)
–       spontaneous planning on emerging instances (SECAP, SEAP, Climate adaptation strategies, ITIs, Urban Resilience plan, etc.)
Given the focus of the Conference on Computational Science issues, the STP4P  workshop welcomes contributions on ICT, spatial planning, and computational aspects, proposals and applications from a wide variety of scholars on the issues proposed. Engineers, Urban and Regional Planners, Architects, Geographers and Environmental Engineers, among others are welcome to contribute.
Keywords: Socio-ecological systems, Spatial Plannning, Emerging science, Innovation, spatial planning, ICT, urban governance, smart cities, urban and regional growth, Cultural Heritage, urban and regional planning; natural and anthropogenic processes; Open Data, Big Data.
Each paper will be independently reviewed by 3 programme committee members. Their individual scores will be evaluated by a small sub-committee and result in one of the following final decisions: accepted, or accepted on the condition that suggestions for improvement will be incorporated, or rejected. Notification of this decision will take place on April 2020.
Individuals and groups should submit complete papers (10 to 16 pages).
Accepted contributions will be published in the Springer-Verlag Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) volumes
Authors Guideline
Please adhere strictly to the formatting provided in the template to prepare your paper and refrain from modifying it.The submitted paper must be camera-ready and formatted according to the rules of LNCS. For formatting information, see the publisher’s web site (http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0). Submission implies the willingness of at least one of the authors to register and present the paper.
Submission
papers should be submitted at: http://ess.iccsa.org/
please don’t forget to select “Science, technologies and policies to innovate spatial planning (STP4P 2020)” workshop from the drop-down list of all workshops.
Proceedings
Papers accepted to “STP4P 2020” will be published in the ICCSA Conference proceedings, in Springer-Verlag Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series, with doi, indexed by WOS, Scopus and DBLP.
Important dates
15 March 2020: Deadline for full paper submission
24 April 2020: Notification of acceptance
8 May 2020: Early-bird registration ends
8 May 2020: Deadline for Camera Ready Papers
1-4 July, 2020ICCSA 2020 Conference

Organizers Information:

Chiara Garau, (DICAAR, University of Cagliari)
Daniele La Rosa, (DICAR, University of Catania)
Francesco Scorza, (University of Basilicata)
Anna Maria Colavitti, (DICAAR, University of Cagliari)
Beniamino Murgante, (University of Basilicata)
Paolo La Greca, (DICAR, University of Catania)

 

Scientific Committee:

Federico Amato, University of Basilicata, Italy

Alessandro Aurigi, University of Plymouth, United Kingdom

Margherita Azzari, University of Florence, Italy

Giuseppe Borruso, University of Trieste

Anna Maria Colavitti, University of Cagliari

Tanja Congiu, University of Sassari, Italy

Federico Cugurullo,  Trinity College of Dublin

Chiara Garau, University of Cagliari, Italy

Daniele La Rosa, University of Catania, Italy

Beniamino Murgante, University of Basilicata, Italy

Enrica Papa, University of Westminster, London, United Kingdom

Alessandro Plaisant, University of Sassari, Italy

Francesco Scorza, University of Basilicata, Italy

Anastasia Stratigea,  University of Athens – NTUA

Katharine Willis, University of Plymouth, United Kingdom

Claudia Yamu, University of Groningen

Paola Zamperlin, University of Florence, Italy

Corrado Zoppi, University of Cagliari, Italy

 

 

Gen 312017
 

31===================================================================

The 32nd Italian Geographers Congress

7-10 June, 2017. Rome, Italy

http://www.congressogeografico.it/

===================================================================

*CALL FOR PAPERS*

We are pleased to invite you to submit an abstract proposal for the session “Smart and dynamic cities: data, indicators and analysis to understand cities, territories and human behaviors” at the 32nd Italian Geographers Congress, to be held on University La Sapienza in Rome, on 7-10 June, 2017.

 

For a complete description of the session see: http://www.congressogeografico.it/sessione/s04/

Abstract submission deadline: February 15, 2017

Please submit your proposal using the form: http://www.congressogeografico.it/call-for-abstract/

Registration deadline: April 15, 2017

Fees and other information: http://www.congressogeografico.it/iscrizione/

 

All the presented papers will be published in the Conference Proceedings.

A selection of papers will be evaluated for being published in a special issue of a double blind peer reviewed journal or a volume which will be communicated after the conference.

 

Paola Zamperlin, University of Cagliari; Margherita Azzari, University of Firenze; Arnaldo Bibo Cecchini, University of Sassari; Chiara Garau, University of Cagliari

Gen 102017
 

Regional Studies Association Annual Conference, Dublin 4-7 June 2017

Governing the Smart City: a socio-environmental inquiry

*CALL FOR PAPERS*

=============================================================

Session organisers:

Federico Cugurullo, Department of Geography, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland:cugurulf@tcd.ie

Chiara Garau, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Architecture (DICAAR), University of Cagliari, Italy cgarau@unica.it

Ginevra Balletto, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Architecture (DICAAR), University of Cagliari, Italy

Paola Zamperlin, Applied Geography Lab, Department of History, Archaeology, Geography, Art and Performance Arts (SAGAS), University of Firenze, Italy.

=============================================================

Smart-city initiatives are rapidly shaping the way urban and regional development is being understood and practiced across the world. Smart-city projects promote the implementation of a number of urban technologies as part of a broader urban trend towards big data, the Internet of Things and sensor networks. However, to date, it is unclear how such urban strategies impact on local environments and societies.

Focusing on urban governance, this session aims to expand the knowledge of the political machinery that is behind the conceptualisation, implementation and development of so-called smart cities. The objective of the session is twofold. We seek papers which critique the governance of current smart-city initiatives, but also studies that can help us reflect on how smart technologies can be used to better govern and develop cities.

More specifically, the session explores how different modes and tools of smart-city governance influence the following (and hitherto overlooked) socio-environmental aspects of smart-city initiatives as they impact on urban development and living:

  • Sustainability
  • Land use
  • Happiness
  • Education
  • Citizens’ behaviours
  • Technology acceptance
  • Urban economy
  • Smart devices/users relationships

Please submit proposals for papers in the form of a 250 word abstract through the Regional Studies Association conference portal by Friday 24th February 2017.

 

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