Tag Archives: Events

Differential Mobilities Begins Today

DifferentialMobs

May 8-11, 2013 at Concordia University, Montreal

More info at http://mobilities.ca/pamnet-4/about/

From May 8-11, 2013 the Mobile Media Lab in the Communication Studies department of Concordia University in Montreal will be hosting Differential Mobilities: Movement and Mediation in Networked Societies. This international conference is sponsored by the Pan-American Mobilities Network, in association with the European Cosmobilities Network. The conference will be held in collaboration with the 4th annual meeting of the Pan-American Mobilities Network.  Previous conferences have been held at:  Royal Roads University, Victoria B.C (2010);  Drexel University, Philadelphia PA (2011) ; and North Carolina State University, Raleigh-Durham NC (2012).

The conference is an opportunity for scholars, artists, activists, and policy makers to engage in a lively exchange of  ideas in an interdisciplinary context, taking the term “mobilities” as a fulcrum. Mobilities has become an important framework for understanding and analyzing contemporary social, spatial, economic and political practices. Mobilities research is interdisciplinary, focusing on the systematic movement of people, goods and information that “travel” around the world at speeds that are greater than before, creating distinct patterns, flows– and blockages. Mobilities research contributes to the study of these technological, social and cultural developments from a critical perspective.

Follow Us On Social Media

You can follow the conference on social media at these locations:
o   Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/mmlMTL
o   Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mmlMTL
o   Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/mmlMTL

Hashtag #mobilities13 in all your related posts.

We invite you to download our Guidebook Mobile Device App in order to view and manage the schedule remotely. You’ll be able to plan your day with a personalized schedule and browse exhibitors, maps and general show info. The app is compatible with iPhones, iPads, iPod Touches and Android devices. Windows Phone 7 and Blackberry users can access the same information via our mobile site at m.guidebook.com

To get the guide, choose one of the methods below:

  • Download ‘Guidebook’ from the Apple App Store or the Android Marketplace
  • Visit http://guidebook.com/getit from your phone’s browser

Organizing Committee:

  • Kim Sawchuk (Concordia University, Québec)
  • Jim Conley (Trent University, Canada)
  • Owen Chapman (Concordia University, Québec)
  • Adriana de Souza e Silva (NC State University, USA)
  • Paola Jirón Martinez (University of Chile, Chile)
  • Mimi Sheller (Drexel University, USA)
  • Phillip Vannini (Royal Roads University, Canada)

The Pan-American Mobilities Network is a scholarly and professional network dedicated to the study of mobilities in South, Central, and North America. The Pan-American Mobilities Network gathers individuals and groups interested in developing more knowledge about mobilities on–or intersecting with–these continents and keen on building collegial relationships. Membership is free and a web-site for the organization is in process.

The Cosmobilities Network connects European scientists working in the field of mobility research. As an interdisciplinary network it represents state of the art research on different aspects of social, physical, cultural and virtual mobilities. It fosters mobility research as a key discipline investigating the modernization of European societies under the conditions of globalization and global complexity.

Conference Chair:  Kim Sawchuk (Concordia University, Québec)

For further information, contact: Ben Spencer, Administrative Coordinator, Mobile Media Labmmcconcordia@gmail.com

 

Ecoarttech visiting Urban Vitality & the Arts

Urban Vitality and the Arts

Thursday, 2 May 2013, 6:30 – 9:20 pm
URBN 141, 3501 Market Street

ecoarttech_webIH_03 copyThe artist team Ecoarttech (Leila Nadir and Cary Pepperment) will be presenting a Philadelphia premier of their work Indeterminate Hikes+ as part of the class Urban Vitality & the Arts, taught by Mimi Sheller and Hana Iverson. Ecoarttech work on the overlapping terrain between “nature”, built environments, mobility and electronic spaces and technologies. They will be in conversation with Dr. Christian Hunold, Associate Professor of Political Science in Drexel’s College of Arts and Sciences, whose research interests revolve around sustainability and the politics of renewable energy; and writer Bernard Brown, who writes the Urban Naturalist column for GRID Magazine.

You can find more information on ecoarttech and their other work at http://www.ecoarttech.net/

This event is free and open to the public, but is part of an instructional course so please to attend please contact: Mimi Sheller, director of the Center for Mobilities Research and Policy, mimi.sheller@drexel.edu.

Mobilities & STS Visiting Speaker

Mobilities Visiting Speaker

Co-sponsored by the Science & Technology Studies Program, College of Arts and Sciences

THURSDAY, APRIL 4

6:30-7:30pm, MACALISTER 2020 BOARD ROOM

Crossroads in STS based Mobilities: The ‘Costa Concordia’ case as exemplary story

Costa Concordia Salvage

Costa Concordia Salvage

 

A talk by Giuseppina Pellegrino (President of STS Italia, and Asst. Professor, Sociology of Culture & Communication, University of Calabria, Italy

This talk aims to describe and identify potential crossroads between STS and Mobilities as two contiguous fields. As they share an interdisciplinary and even transdisciplinary status, their hybridization can provide fertile materials of reflection from both a theoretical and an empirical viewpoint.
In order to depict similarities and differences between STS and Mobility Studies, the case of the cruise ship ‘Costa Concordia’ partial sinking in January 2012 off the Giglio island in Italy will be proposed as ‘exemplary story’ to summarize the key-concepts and criticalities of STS-based Mobilities.

Dr. Pelligrino will also be discussing the state of Science and Technology Studies in Italy and the formation of STS Italia:

THURSDAY, APRIL 4
12-1 P.M.
HAGERTY LIBRARY
STEIN CONFERENCE ROOM 302

For more information please contact:

mimi.sheller@drexel.edu

ExCITE Center Opening

ExCITe Center Opening

Wednesday, November 28th, 3:30-6pm

UC Science Center,  3401 Market St

Drexel University is opening a cross-discipline research/tech incubator center. The Expressive and Creative Interaction Technology — or ExCITe — Center is being created in 11,000 square-feet of converted industrial office space on the first floor of the University City Science Center building at 3401 Market.

The ExCITe Center will bring together translational research being conducted at Drexel’s colleges of Engineering, Arts & Science, Media Arts & Design and Information Science Technology in the same space. Music technology, humanoid robots, app development, video games, and digital knitting machines will converge with many other technologies in one creative space. The center will also serve as an incubator for local innovation partnerships.

“The opening of the ExCITe Center reflects Drexel’s commitment to re-imagine the urban research university for the 21st Century,” said Drexel President John A. Fry, in a statement. “We seek to foster creativity, innovation, collaboration and a commitment to community. The ExCITe Center will be a place that brings all of those core values together to create real economic opportunities for our city and region as well as a significant impact in society.”

Research in the ExCITe Center will include all aspects of expression and interaction, from performing arts technology to civic and city-scale computing. It will also, build on Drexel’s existing collaborations with arts and cultural institutions, regional development organizations and government.

ExCITE“The ExCITe Center brings together not only technologists and researchers, but also designers, artists and musicians, city and transportation planners and civic innovators and entrepreneurs,” said Dr. Youngmoo Kim, the director of the ExCITe Center. “It’s a place for creative and passionate people who want to work together to transform Philadelphia through innovation and the digital creative economy.”

Three projects picked for seed funding from ExCITe were announced earlier this year, including one in which the Center for Mobilities Research and Policy is a collaborator, Sonic City.

They are: “Virtual Opera” led by the Opera Company of Philadelphia with the Curtis Institute of Music; “Cerebral Palsy Rehabilitation Gaming” led by Drexel’s Antoinette Westphal College of Media Arts & Design with the School of Biomedical Engineering and the College of Nursing and Health Professions; and “Sonic City” led by Neighborhood Narratives Project with Breadboard, Azavea, Drexel University Goodwin School of Education, College of Engineering, and the mCenter in the College of Arts and Sciences.

A truly multidisciplinary effort, Sonic City is a city-scale art and engineering project designed to engage the bus system as a creative interface for people to interactively engage the sounds of the city. Diverse neighborhoods of Philadelphia are connected through a sonic interface made up of real-time and recorded sound that will be experienced in bus shelter “installations” modified by the movement of the bus system. Real-time recordings of the city gathered through geo-spatial sensor-networks, along with seeded music and spoken words will be mixed with sounds contributed by the public via smartphones and the internet. The project will create geographically distinct aural immersion into a “musical” sound collage that reveals an innovative sonic and spatial patterning of the city.

For more info please contact mimi.sheller@drexel.edu, and for some ideas on “mobile mediality” as a sonic experience visit this mCenter blog.

Mobilities Visiting Speaker Fall 2012

From meaning to sense. Social theory in motion

MOBILITIES VISITING SPEAKER:

Lars Frers

(Telemark University College, Norway)

Wednesday, 28 November 2012

12-2 PM

PSA Building – Library

33rd & Powelton Ave., Drexel University, Philadelphia

Sponsored by the Center for Mobilities Research and Policy

Based on the detailed analysis of video material recorded in different public settings, this talk will explore an alternative understanding of central categories of social theory, namely meaning, sense and intentionality. Using video recordings of tourists exploring the Norwegian Tourist Route and of people moving through railway terminals and similar public settings, the discussion will try to bind social theory to actual processes unfolding in everyday practices – with the aim of understanding motion, movement and mobility in the social sphere not beyond language, but on the hither side of language.

St. Pancras Station, London

Lars Frers is Associate Professor at Telemark University College in Norway. He has studied in Kiel, Berlin, Bloomington/IN, and Darmstadt, and completed research projects at the University of Oslo and the University of Hamburg. He has published on materiality, perception, and on the use of video based-methods in fieldwork. He is the main guest editor for the upcoming special issue “Absence – Materiality, embodiment, resistance” in the journal Cultural Geographies and he is currently working on a book, From Meaning to Sense: Social Theory in Motion.

All are welcome – refreshments will be served!

For more info please contact mimi.sheller@drexel.edu

Call For Papers Differential Mobilities

Differential Mobilities: Movement and Mediation in Networked Societies

4th Pan-American Mobilities Network conference, May 8-13, 2013

Differential Mobilities

Differential Mobilities: Movement and Mediation in Networked Societies

Pan-American Mobilities Network May 8-13, 2013

Conference website and abstract submission (deadline November 21st):

http://mobilities.ca/pamnet-4/

 

From May 8-11, 2013 the Mobile Media Lab in the Communication Studies department of Concordia University in Montreal will be hosting an international conference sponsored by the Pan-American Mobilities Network in collaboration with the European Cosmobilities Network.

Confirmed keynote and plenary speakers:

Darin Barney (McGill University, Montreal, Quebec)

Gisele Beiguelman (University of São Paulo, Brazil)

Micha Cárdenas (University of San Diego, California)

Vera Chouinard (McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario)

Gerard Goggin (University of Sydney, Australia)

Ole B.  Jensen (Aalborg University, Denmark)

Jason Lewis and Skawennati Fragnito (Concordia University,Montreal, Quebec)

Danielle Peers and Lindsay Eales (University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta)

 

Mobilities has become an important framework for understanding and analyzing contemporary social, spatial, economic and political practices. Mobilities research is interdisciplinary, focusing on the systematic movement of people, goods and information that “travel” around the world at speeds that are greater than before, creating distinct patterns, flows– and blockages. Mobilities research contributes to the study of these technological, social and cultural developments from a critical perspective. The theme of this year’s conference is “Differential Mobilities: Movement and Mediation in Networked Societies”. The term ‘differential mobilities’ has been deployed to describe dynamics of power within networked societies. When we conceptualize movement, mobility, or flows within spaces and places, we need to account for the systemic differences within infrastructures and terrains that create uneven forms of access. ‘Differential mobilities’, conceptually, highlights how exclusions occur, creating striations of power. It draws attention to differences in how these inequalities are experienced, the strategies for resistance, and the processes of mediation that have been implemented to instigate change.

We invite scholars, artists, and activists to submit creative presentations or papers that address all aspects of this theme, or related topics in mobilities research, such as:

  • Alternative mobilities and slow movements;
  • Borders, surveillance, and securitization with ubiquitous and mobile technologies;
  • Class, culture and the mediation of mobilities;
  • Civic engagement and political participation through mobile social media, new mapping practices and location-aware technologies;
  • Creativity and the mobilization of resistance;
  • Discrimination and the built environment;
  • Embodiment, performance and mobile mediations;
  • Environmentalism, mediation and mobilities;
  • Immigration, migration and mobilities;
  • Indigenous culture and the mobilities paradigm;
  • Media theory and differential mobilities;
  • Mobile communications, differential mobilities and everyday life practices;
  • New methodologies for mobilities research;
  • Planning, policy and design for present and future mobilities;
  • Privacy and surveillance issues  and location-based social networks;
  • Race, gender and the politics of mobilities;
  • Regulating networks;
  • Social movements and mediated mobilities;
  • Urban and rural spatialities and the geographies of place;
  • Tourism, imaginary travel, and virtual travel;
  • Transitions toward sustainable mobilities;
  • Transportation and differential movements

Disciplines represented at the conference may include (but are not exclusive to): Anthropology, Architecture and Design, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Communication, Criminology, Cultural Studies, Geography, Media, Sound and Visual Arts, Politics and International Relations, Public Policy, Sociology, Theatre and Performance Studies, Tourism Research, Transport Research, and Urban Studies.

 
Conference location:

Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec

Conference hotel:

Discounted rates will be available to registered participants.

Important dates:

Deadline for abstracts: 21 November, 2012

(maximum 300 words, including references)

Notification of acceptance:  15 January, 2013

Conference registration opens:  15 January, 2013

Early Registration deadline:  2 March 1, 2013

Conference Dates:  8-11 May, 2013

Please submit your abstracts through the form hosted by the conference website by no later than November 21st:

http://mobilities.ca/pamnet-4/

Organizing Committee:

Kim Sawchuk (Concordia University, Québec)
Jim Conley (Trent University, Canada)
Owen Chapman (Concordia University, Québec)
Adriana de Souza e Silva (NC State University, USA)
Paola Jirón Martinez (University of Chile, Chile)
Mary Gray (Microsoft/Indiana Univerisity, USA)
Ole B. Jensen (Aalborg University, Denmark)
André Lemos (Federal University of Bahia, Brazil)
Mimi Sheller (Drexel University, USA)
Jen Southern (Lancaster University, UK)
Phillip Vannini (Royal Roads University, Canada)

 

For further information, contact:

Ben Spencer, Administrative Coordinator, Mobile Media Lab

mmcconcordia@gmail.com

Concordia University, Montréal, Québec

 Image credit: Antoni Abad, 2012.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Neighborhood Roundtable

The Neighborhood Roundtable

photo © Andrew Leiser 2011 Neighborhood Narratives, Drexel, summer 2011

Friday, April 20th, 11am to 2pm

Macalister Hall, Rm. 2019-2020 (33rd & Chestnut St.), Drexel University


Working in partnership with a range of West Philadelphia community organizations, Drexel University recently initiated a set of community revitalization strategies along historic Lancaster Avenue. On April 20th (11am – 2pm), Drexel’s Center for Mobilities Research and Policy is sponsoring a community conversation about the role artists might play in these Powelton, Mantua and Belmont neighborhood enrichment efforts. Can artists be catalysts for change? How and under what conditions? What does ideal collaboration between artists, institutions and the Lancaster community look like?

Co-hosted by Mimi Sheller (Director, mCenter: The Center for Mobilities Research and Policy) and Hana Iverson (Director, the Neighborhood Narratives Project) with support from the Center for Creative Research at NYU, The Neighborhood Roundtable will provide an opportunity for neighborhood and community representatives to engage in creative conversation about these issues with renowned artist/activists, Drexel students and faculty.

Please RSVP to mimi.sheller@drexel.edu 

Co-Moderators:
Mimi Sheller (Professor of Sociology; Director, mCenter@Drexel)
Hana Iverson (Drexel faculty; Director, Neighborhood Narratives; CCR Fellow)

Participants:
Lucy Kerman (Vice Provost for Community and Education)

Liz Lerman (Artist, Founding Artistic Director Liz Lerman Dance Exchange, CCR Founding Fellow)

Jawole Willa Jo  Zollar (Artist, Founder and Artistic Director Urban Bushwomen, CCR Founding Fellow)

Mark Christman (Representative from University City District: 38th Street/South)

George Stevens (President of the Lancaster 21st Century Business Organization)

James Wright (Representative Peoples’ Emergency Center: 38th Street/North)
 
Center for Creative Research and the Neighborhood Narratives Project
Artists and universities in the United States have long enjoyed the benefits of proximity to one another and are participants in a powerful, historically embedded and endlessly re-invented relationship with one another.  As major non-profit actors in American life, both are builders, makers and shapers of society’s values. In 2005, a group of mature choreographers came together to form the Center for Creative Research, in order to investigate and redefine how independent artists and institutions of higher learning could engage with one another. Key questions included, how can reciprocal relationships evolve between artists, institutions and communities, and how might these relationships facilitate mutually-beneficial exchanges between participants while increasing the depth of students’ experiential learning? As a nexus of this investigation, a collaboration was developed with the Neighborhood Narratives Project, a mobile locative media curriculum that engages students in a practice of situated story-telling incorporatingaspects of cultural and visual anthropology, ethnography, geography and, with the recent addition of CCR artists, the role of embodied practice in interdisciplinary investigation.  The Neighborhood Narratives Project is a vehicle to engage interactively and interconnect community, requiring students and artists to invite public participation, enabling organic growth of a community’s collective narrative and empowering citizens to embed social knowledge in the wired/wireless landscape of the urban environment.
 

Contact for Further Information: mimi.sheller@drexel.edu

New Interaction Orders

New Interaction Orders, New Mobile Publics?

13-14 April 2012

Imagination Lab, Lancaster University, UK

This workshop explores the emergence of ‘mobile publics’, inspired by Goffman’s studies of  public places as the performative locus of social orders and William Holly Whyte’s investigations of the social life of small urban spaces. We bring theory and empirical research, everyday lived practice, design, policy and politics together through collaborative analysis  of multi-sited, mobile, ethnographic or otherwise qualitative studies of behavior in today’s public spaces.

Guest Speakers: Christian LicoppeKeith HamptonMimi Sheller

mCenter Director Mimi Sheller will be speaking at 10am (ET) Friday

Watch Live Webcast here http://www.lancs.ac.uk/fass/events/new_interaction_order/webcast.htm

Equipped with mobile technologies, people connect in ways that were unthinkable when Goffman wrote Behaviour in public spaces (1963) and William Whyte explored The social life of small urban spaces (1980). The momentous Arab Spring events, London riots and ’2011 Occupy’ demonstrations are extreme examples that pose old questions about the ‘interaction order’ and its relation to social order and the public sphere in new ways. On the one hand, mobile connectivity enables micro-coordination of increasingly mobile everyday lives, new modulations of co-presence, absent presence and present absence, and transformations of socio-material practices of availability, obligation, intimacy and strangerhood in public. Some of the social innovations involved also shape emergent new practices of mobilising people in protests and crises. Arguably new, agile, local and globally networked communities and ‘mobile publics’ are forming. On the other, worries over a loss of civility, community, privacy, and new forms of surveillance enabled by the ever closer intermeshing of digital technology and everyday ‘movement-spaces’ fuel fears over an erosion of civil liberties and ‘capital P’ politics.

Goffman’s insistence that ‘the interaction order’ is the performative locus of such utopian and dystopian transformations and his and Whyte’s attention to detail are the motivation for this two-day interdisciplinary workshop. We would like to bring micro and macro, theory and empirical research, everyday lived practice, design, policy and politics together through collaborative analysis of multi-sited, mobile, ethnographic or otherwise qualitative studies of behaviour in today’s public spaces, zeitdiagnostic theory and avantgarde design. We invite researchers, designers, technology developers, architects, urban planners, artists and urban communities to submit contributions that explore aspects of new and old ‘behaviour in public spaces’, including (but not limited to):

  1. the ‘osmotic’ relationship between physical and virtual spaces, connectivity and mobility
  2. the social life of such spaces
  3. emergent principles and practices of the 21st Century interaction order
  4. augmented embodied and sensory phenomenology and material agency
  5. links between the interaction order, public engagement, and public space
  6. tensions between mobile informationalized everyday lives and movement-spaces and principles of privacy and civil liberty, security, splintering and sorting of ‘access’
  7. examples, practices and impacts of improvised communities and mobile publics, and collective intelligence
  8. examples and methods of collaborative, experimental, radically careful and carefully radical design of new practices, technologies, forms of public engagement and spaces
  9. reflections on the links between theory, empirical studies, design and politics in the broadest sense

Organisers: Chris Boyko, Monika Büscher, Tim Dant, Jill Ebrey, Pauline Feron, Karenza Moore, Jen Southern, Katherine Willis

Contact: p.feron@lancaster.ac.uk

http://www.lancs.ac.uk/fass/events/new_interaction_order/index.htm

Janey Program

2012 JANEY ANNUAL CONFERENCE
20TH ANNIVERSARY

The New School for social research

THURSDAY MARCH 22 2012
1:00 PM TO 8:00 PM

Opening Remarks

Federico Finchelstein, Associate Professor of History, LANG & NSSR
Director of the Janey Program in Latin American Studies

Alcoa Advertisement, Holiday Magazine, 1943

1:00-3:00 First Panel with Former Janey Fellows

Mimi Sheller, Drexel University
“Aluminum Dreams and the Making of Mobile Modernities”

Victoria Crespo, Colegio de México
“Old and New Forms of Dictatorships in Latin America”

Evan Daniel, Cuny Queens College
“Rolling for the Revolution: A Transnational History of Cuban Cigar Makers in Havana,
Florida, and New York City, 1850s-1890s”
Moderator: Louise Walker, Assistant Professor of History, NSSR

3:00-3:15 Coffee Break

3:15-5:00 Second Panel with Current Janey Fellows

Melissa Amezcua Yepiz, Sociology NSSR
Katie Detwiler, Anthropology NSSR
Alberto Fernández, Politics NSSR
Nicolás Figueroa, Sociology NSSR
Luis Herrán, Politics and Historical Studies NSSR
Gema Santamaría, Sociology and Historical Studies NSSR
Moderator: Christian Proaño, Assistant Professor of Economics, NSSR

5:00-7:00 Key note speaker

Javier Auyero, University of Texas at Austin
“A Political Ethnographer’s Sinuous Road”

7:00 Reception

THE NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH
6 E 16TH STREET, ROOM 1103, 11TH FLOOR- WOLFF CONFERENCE ROOM

FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

Future Everything 2012

Limited Offer on FutureEverything Conference


FutureEverything is an award-winning festival and conference based in Manchester, England. We’d like to bring your attention to the upcoming conference events running in Manchester between 17-18 May and the special offer, which has just been announced.

The FutureEverything 2012 Conference http://futureeverything.org/speakers (and associated workshop events) brings together around 500 delegates from across the creative industries, new technologies, innovation, arts, public sector and academia.

FutureEverything was recently rated by the Guardian as one of the top ten international ideas festivals, alongside TEDx, 99% and South by South West.

The FutureEverything 2012 Conference looks at the next lurch into the unknown brought about by a new participatory culture that is changing our world. We see profound changes in the digital and creative sector, as well as in society at large. The conference presents the people who are changing our world and the future-thinkers who enable us to see the possibilities of such connectivity.

Conference topics include:

  • Participatory Media
  • Wikileaks and Arab Spring
  • Future Cities
  • Open Knowledge
  • Fab Lab Creative Communities

Three of our keynote speakers (Carlo Ratti, Rohan Gunatillake and Cesar A. Hidalgo) are from Wired Magazine’s The Smart List 2012: 50 People Who Will Change The World. Additional speakers include Icelandic MP and former Wikileaks spokesperson Birgitta JonsdottirBilal Randeree (Al Jazeera), Juliana Rotich (Ushahidi), Bill Thompson, William Heath (Mydex), Adrian Woolard (BBC), Juha van’t Zelfde, Moritz Stefaner and more to be announced.

FutureEverything 2012 also hosts the launch of the £4M Creative Exchange (http://thecreativeexchange.org) Knowledge Hub funded by AHRC, and a celebration of the 75th anniversary of the Mass Observation Movement and the UN International Year of Co-operatives - presented with a unique contemporary twist by artists and designers working in these new media.

Visit the website for further details: http://futureeverything.org/conference.

The Festival also features a packed programme of art and music events.

Special Offer (until April 1st, 2012)
We have created a special offer of 20% off the current Advanced Rate 2 Day Conference Ticket. With this exclusive rate, the price is reduced from £180 to £144.

If you’d like to take advantage of this limited offer, quote this promotion code when purchasing your ticket: CSO2012

Tickets can be purchased via this link, please select the Advanced Rate 2 Day Conference Ticket and press the promotion code button for this exclusive special offer: http://futureeverything.org/tickets/

Conference Bursaries
FutureEverything is pleased to announce that a limited number of Conference Bursaries are available for practicing artists, activists and change makers without institutional support to ensure their voices are fully represented at the Conference. Apply here http://bit.ly/febursary.

If you have any further queries do not hesitate to get in touch.

Best Wishes,

FutureEverything
39 Edge Street
Manchester
M4 1HW
info@futureeverything.org
http://www.futureeverything.org