Monday, February 23, 2015

Fw: Call for Papers: Annals of Leisure Research - Ethics and Leisure



Marija Lazarev Zivanovic
MBA & LRG Dissertation Lead
Les Roches Gruyère University of Applied Science
Glion Institute of Higher Education
Rue l'ondine 20
1630 BULLE
Switzerland
Tel: 0041 26 919 78 78
Fax: 0041 26 919 78 39
Email: Marija.lazarevzivanovic@glion.edu
www.lrguas.ch

From: list-owner@mail.atlas-euro.org <list-owner@mail.atlas-euro.org> on behalf of Neil Carr <neil.carr@otago.ac.nz>
Sent: 24 February 2015 06:02
To: TOURISMANTHROPOLOGY@JISCMAIL.AC.UK; leisurenet-group@griffith.edu.au; TOURISM-MARKETING@JISCMAIL.AC.UK; SPORT-CULTURE-SOCIETY@JISCMAIL.AC.UK; MARITIME-LEISURE-RESEARCH@JISCMAIL.AC.UK; list@atlas-euro.org; cals@uwaterloo.ca; caglist@lists.uvic.ca; CRIT-GEOG-FORUM@JISCMAIL.AC.UK; TOURISMANTHROPOLOGY@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: ATLAS list Call for Papers: Annals of Leisure Research - Ethics and Leisure
 


CALL FOR PAPERS (with apologies for multiple postings) - ANNALS OF LEISURE RESEARCHEthics and Leisure (guest editor Brent Lovelock. Email: brent.lovelock@otago.ac.nz)
 
Leisure comprises a range of relatively commonly accepted pursuits including for example playing a game of golf, going shopping, or watching a movie. Some, however, would suggest that leisure has a darker side and includes such activities as serial killing, internet pornography, and sex tourism (Rojek 2000).  While such deviant leisure practices appear to violate criminal and non-criminal moral norms (Stebbins 1996), whether there is a "good versus bad leisure" (Mobily 1999: 187) is still unclear: this special issue will address this and other fundamental ethical questions facing leisure researchers, practitioners and participants.
 
While ethical explorations focusing on tourism as a leisure activity have begun to emerge within the literature (e.g. Fennell 2006; 2012; Lovelock and Lovelock 2013) to date this level of interest has not been paralleled within the leisure field where there has been "little concern for explicitly discussing the morality of leisure" (Clarke 1995: 209). This oversight is surprising, considering the classical view of the role of leisure in the habituation of virtue, as articulated in Aristotle's Politics (List 2005).
 
To date, the main focus of ethics work in leisure studies has been limited to issues of equity (e.g. of access and participation) and professional development. The latter theme has arguably dominated, to the extent that leisure ethics has been most often discussed in terms of professionalism (Sylvester 2008).  McNamee and Brackenridge (1996: 4) refer to this as "ethics with a small 'e'", dominated by a descriptive ethics approach.  In the sporting field too, ethics has often been based upon a similar "narrow view of morality" that considers rules and rule-breaking, while failing to address more fundamental ethical issues (Lindfelt 2005: 41). Such issues may include the use of resources in leisure practice,  the origin of those resources, and how they are presented to the consumer: all of which involve ethical judgements (Rojek 2005: 19).
 
The ongoing omission of ethical considerations in contemporary models of leisure is a weakness that could be used to perpetuate leisure practices that are "illegal, immoral and contraindicative to human growth and development" (Ellis and Rossman 2008: 2). Consequently, there has been a growing call to consider leisure ethics with a capital "E", a response to which would involve moral philosophy and an exploration of the role of leisure in how we ought to live our lives (McNamee and Brackenridge 1996: 4).
 
This special issue responds to the above calls, seeking contributions that address a range of ethical issues across the leisure field, from the macro 'corporate' issues alluded to by Rojek above, to the micro-moralities of individuals offering or engaging in specific leisure activities.  The goal of this special issue is to take stock of contemporary leisure ethics issues, and to advance the utilisation of normative and applied ethics approaches to these issues. For this reason, contributions of both an applied and theoretical nature are welcome.  Potential topics may include (among others):
 
  • Equity and access (e.g. racism, sexism, disability)
  • Deviant leisure
  • Deviant practices (e.g. cheating, sexual abuse, doping)
  • Animals and leisure
  • The 'body-shape' industry
  • Leisure ethics and gender
  • Leisure and exploitation (labour rights)
  • Leisure and the environment
  • Children and leisure
  • Leisure marketing
  • Philosophy and leisure
  • Leisure, freedom and power
  • Ethics and professionalism
  • Ethics and leisure policy
  • Ethics of sport
 
Important Dates for Authors:
Submission of Abstracts: Please send proposed paper title and an abstract of no more than 250 words to the guest editor, Brent Lovelock (brent.lovelock@otago.ac.nz) no later than 1st June 2015. We will advise the outcome no later than 20th June 2015.
Submission of Full Paper: 1st November 2015 (further details to be advised upon confirmation of abstract acceptance).
Publication: Third issue of 2016 (approximately September)
 
 
References:
Clarke, A. (1995) 'Back to basics: the ethics of leisure', in G.McFee, W. Murphy and G.Whannel (eds) Leisure Cultures: Values, Genders, Lifestyles (LSA Publication No: 54). Eastbourne: Leisure Studies Association, pp. 207-216.
Ellis, G.D. and Rossman, J.R. (2008) Creating Value for Participants through Experience Staging: Parks, Recreation, and Tourism in the Experience Industry. Journal of Park & Recreation Administration, 26(4): 1-20.
Fennell, D.A. (2006) Tourism Ethics. Clevedon, U.K., Channel View.
Fennell, D.A. (2012) Tourism and Animal Ethics. London, Routledge.
Lindfelt, M. (2005) Sport and ethics: How far can you go? World Leisure Journal 47(4): 41-50.
List, C.J.  (2005) The Virtues of Wild Leisure. Environmental Ethics 27(4): 355-373.
Lovelock, B.A. and Lovelock, K. (2013) The Ethics of Tourism: Critical and Applied Perspectives. London, Routledge.
McNamee, M. and Brackenridge, C. (1996) Ethics in Leisure - An Agenda for Research. Paper presented to the Leisure Studies Association 1996 Annual Conference, Wageningen International Conference Centre, The Netherlands.
Mobily, K. E. (1999) New horizons in models of practice in therapeutic recreation. Therapeutic
Recreation Journal, 23(3): 174-192.
Rojek, C. (2005) Leisure Theory: Principles and Practice. Basingstoke, Palgrave McMillan.
Rojek, C (2000) Leisure and Culture. Basingstoke and London, Macmillan.
Stebbins, R.A. (1996). Tolerable differences: Living with deviance. Toronto:McGraw-Hill Ryerson.
 
 
 
 
Dr Brent Lovelock
Associate Professor
Department of Tourism
& Co-Director Centre for Recreation Research
University of Otago

PO Box 56
DUNEDIN
NEW ZEALAND
Ph (03) 479-8069 or 479-8520 (sec.)
www.otago.ac.nz/tourism/
www.crr.otago.ac.nz/
brent.lovelock@otago.ac.nz
 
B. Lovelock & K.M Lovelock (2013) The Ethics of Tourism: Critical and Applied Perspectives Routledge: London   http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415575577/
 
P Please consider the environment before printing my email
 
 
 
 




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Sunday, February 22, 2015

Call For Paper: Time Series Conference - ITISE 2015.1st-3rd,July 2015, Granada, Spain.


To: <peter.goedtkindt@glion.edu>
Subject: Call For Paper: Time Series Conference - ITISE 2015.1st-3rd,July 2015, Granada, Spain.
Reply-To: "itise@itise.org" <itise@itise.org>

* Apologies if you received multiple copies of this CFP.
* Please kindly forward to those who may be interested.
* Please DO NOT reply to this email. To unsubscribe send us an email to: iwtise_cfp@ugr.es, or obtain more information:
itise@ugr.es.

 

2015 International Work-Conference on Time Series (ITISE 2015)

1st-3rd July, 2015. Granada (SPAIN)

itise.ugr.es
 

It is our great pleasure to remind you the International Work-Conference on Time Series (ITISE 2015), which will take place in Granada (Spain) in July, 2015. Details and instructions for the conference can be found at the conference web site (itise.ugr.es). The ITISE 2015 (International work-conference on Time Series) seeks to provide a discussion forum for scientists, engineers, educators and students about the latest ideas and realizations in the foundations, theory, models and applications for interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary research encompassing disciplines of computer science, mathematics, statistics, forecaster, econometric, etc, in the field of time series analysis and forecasting.

We encourage you to submit paper focused on interesting, relevant and original works that are related to these subjects. We also admit the submission of short abstracts, which must be extended to full paper in case of being accepted. You could also be interested in organizing a special session for this conference.

 

These are some important and final dates for the submission (please, if you require more time, contact with itise@ugr.es).



Submission of abstracts by authors: 
February 28th, 2015.

Submission of papers by authors: February 28th, 2015.

Notification of provisional acceptance: April 28th, 2015.

Submission of final papers: May 10th, 2015.

Registration of final papers: May 18th, 2015.

Early registration (special rates): May 18th, 2015.

ITISE CONFERENCE: July 1st-3rd, 2015.

  


Plenary Talk speakers (http://itise.ugr.es/plenaries.php):
 It is a pleasure and honor to announce the following plenary speakers:

Prof. Daniel Peña Sanchez De Rivera. Rector of the Carlos III University of Madrid. Full Professor at Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. Department of Statistics.

Prof. Siem Jan Koopman. Professor of Econometrics at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. Department of Econometrics.

Prof. Hojjat Adeli. Distinguished Member, ASCE, Fellow, AAAS, Fellow IEEE, Fellow, American Neurological Association Professor: Civil, Envir & Geod Eng,SBS-Biomedical Informatics, SBS-Neuroscience. The Ohio State University.

 


The topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

1.-Time Series Analysis and Forecasting

Nonparametric and functional methods

Forecasting with Many Models. Model integration

Econometric models, etc.

2.- Advanced method and on-Line Learning in time series.

Adaptivity for stochastic models

Time series analysis with computational intelligence, etc.

3.- High Dimension and Complex/Big Data.

Techniques for dimension reduction

Forecasting Complex/Big data, etc.

4.- Forecasting in real problem.

Real time macroeconomic monitoring and forecasting

Applications in: energy, finance, transportation, networks, meteorology, health, research and environment, etc.

  


Paper publication:

All accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings, under both ISBN and ISSN references. Contributions will be indexed in the ISI Conference Proceedings Citation Index (Thomson Reuters) and the DBLP database.

Special issues:

A list of papers with very high quality will be selected to be extended and submitted in different special issues. At the moment, we have contact with 3 journals indexed in JCR. More information in the web page of the conference (itise.ugr.es).

 


It will be a pleasure if you can actively participate in ITISE 2015 conference. Thanks for your attention, and we hope to see you in Granada, during the ITISE 2015 event. Please, feel free to contact us for any further question or remark.

 

Sincerely yours.

 ______________________________________________________________________

ITISE 2015

International Work-Conference on Time Series. Granada

1st-3rd July,2015. Granada. (SPAIN).

ITISE 2015 Local Conference and Publicity Chairs

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Wednesday, February 18, 2015

10th COLLOQUIUM ON ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE & DEVELOPMENT

 

February 18, 2015

Dear Colleague,

EIASM and the event Chairs would like to invite you to the 10th anniversary of the Colloquium on Organizational Change & Development that will take place in Larnaca, Cyprus on 11-12 September 2015. 
The theme this year is: CHANGE MANAGEMENT: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE

The deadline to submit your proposal is 2 June 2015.

Chairpersons:

  • Ruth Alas, Estonian Business School, Estonia
  • Christopher J. Rees, University of Manchester, UK and Beijing University of Technology
  • Soulla Louca, University of Nicosia

In summary, this year's colloquium will focus on the past, present and future of OCD. It will seek to promote discussion around:
  - the origins of OCD theory and practice in order to explore how and where it has been used and with what effect;
  - the current theoretical, methodological, environmental and political challenges facing the subject of OCD;
  - possible directions for OCD theory and practice in the future.

The Chairs of the event will seek to mark the occasion of the 10th colloquium by publishing a special issue of an appropriate journal subject to editorial approval of selected papers.

For more details about this event click here.

Please pass this announcement on to colleagues who might be interested.


Kind regards,
Cristina Setyar
Event Manager
----------------
(Please do see EURAM's website for other events in Management.)
----------------

EIASM
PLACE DE BROUCKERE PLEIN 31
1000 BRUSSELS, BELGIUM
Tel: +32 2 226 66 69 | Fax: +32 2 512 19 29
Follow us on facebook  
Please check your personal profile in the EIASM online database: http://www.eiasm.org
If you no longer wish to receive these e-mailings, reply to this message with "unsubscribe" as the Subject.

 

Fw: Save the date: Biennial PhD Colloquium - Postgraduate Research in Leisure and Tourism



Marija Lazarev Zivanovic
MBA & LRG Dissertation Lead
Les Roches Gruyère University of Applied Science
Glion Institute of Higher Education
Rue l'ondine 20
1630 BULLE
Switzerland
Tel: 0041 26 919 78 78
Fax: 0041 26 919 78 39
Email: Marija.lazarevzivanovic@glion.edu
www.lrguas.ch

From: list-owner@mail.atlas-euro.org <list-owner@mail.atlas-euro.org> on behalf of Mosedale Jan <Jan.Mosedale@htwchur.ch>
Sent: 18 February 2015 17:13
To: TRINET-L@lists.hawaii.edu; list@atlas-euro.org; TourismGeography@yahoogroups.com
Subject: ATLAS list Save the date: Biennial PhD Colloquium - Postgraduate Research in Leisure and Tourism
 

With the usual apologies for crossposting.

 

Biennial PhD Colloquium: Postgraduate Research in Leisure and Tourism

Geographies of Leisure and Tourism Research Group of the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG)

 

What       The Colloquium is a small and informal get-together of PhD students and aims to offer opportunities to

·      present research

·      meet other PhD students and create wider academic networks amongst peers

·      discuss research issues with experienced academics and other up-and-coming researchers

·      reflect on your future professional development  through a series of workshops

Who           PhD research students, at any stage of their research.

When        Thursday, 9th - Friday 10th July 2015

The PhD colloquium is sandwiched between the 7th-9th Annual Conference of the Leisure Studies Association (July 7th-9th at the University of Bournemouth) and the Contemporary Perspectives in Tourism and Hospitality Research: Policy, Practice and Performance (12th-14that the University of Brighton).

Where       Bournemouth University, UK

Cost                     The registration fee will be communicated in due course.

 

Keynote Speakers

Professor Cara Aitchison (as part of the Annual Conference of the Leisure Studies Association), Vice Chancellor and Chief Executive of the University of St Mark & St John, is most widely known for her research on social and environmental justice as well as sustainable development in leisure, sport and tourism. She has published Leisure and Tourism Landscapes: Social and Cultural Geographies, co-authored with Nicola Macleod and Stephen Shaw (Routledge, 2001), Gender and Leisure: Social and Cultural Perspectives (Routledge, 2003), Sport and Gender Identities: Masculinities, Femininities and Sexualities (Routledge, 2007) and, with Peter Hopkins and Mei-Po Kwan, Geographies of Muslim Identities: Diaspora, Gender and Belonging (Ashgate, 2007). Prof Aitchison was Chair of the UK Research Excellence Framework (REF) Sub-Panel 26: Sport and Exercise Sciences, Leisure and Tourism and a member of the Main Panel for Social Sciences for REF 2014.

Professor Andrew Church, Director of Research & Development (Social Sciences) in the School of Environment and Technology at the University of Brighton, has written extensively on tourism and leisure geographies (particularly water-based sport, gardening and gardens) and urban regeneration, transport and labour markets. He has recently lead with colleagues from the University of Brighton three projects on the strategic planning of water-related sports and recreation in England and Wales and has previously completed an AHRC funded project on 'Writing the landscape of everyday life: lay narratives of the home garden'. He has published Tourism, Power and Space co-authored with Tim Coles and is on the editorial board of Local Economy.

 

 

Colloquium Background

Through its links with the Royal Geographical Society with the Institute of British Geographers (RGS-IBG), this conference aims to provide an interdisciplinary dialogue around the wider aspects of the conference theme and to provide an opportunity for contemporary, tourism and leisure related research issues to be explored. The conference theme provides a platform for many exciting and critical topics that call for discussion where students from all disciplines which locate tourism and/or leisure within its boundaries are welcomed.

The colloquium will be hosted by the University of Surrey Tourism Research Centre (STRC) with the School of Hospitality and Tourism Management (SHTM). STRC and SHTM not only foster inter-disciplinary and creative research pursuits, but the SHTM also holds the number 1 ranking for tourism education in the UK, and is ranked 5th on a global scale for its teaching and research capabilities within the tourism and hospitality disciplines. Combined with the support of the RGS-IBG's Geographies of Leisure and Tourism Research Group (GLTRG), this colloquium promises to provide an engaging and thought-provoking forum with those at the forefront of tourism, leisure and hospitality research.

 

Conference format

To make the conference as interactive and informative as possible for all delegates, we have three different types of sessions to enable participation on a number of levels.

 

Paper presentations

Participants will present their research in a paper session, where each student will be given 15 minutes to present their research, and respond to any questions.

 

Research conversations

Sessions will be offered where delegates can discuss and constructively critique theirs and others' work in a relaxed environment. Depending on your research area, you will be divided into small groups and given 1 hour to discuss current themes and issues. Following this, there will be half an hour for each group to present a summary of their discussion to everyone.

 

Workshops and panel discussion

In addition to the paper sessions and research conversations, there will be workshops providing students with an opportunity to ask questions and receive answers to issues related, but not limited to: starting a career in academia or research consultancy, as well as general research advice.

 These sessions will be open to all and provide an opportunity for researchers to seek advice from experienced academics. Proposed workshop topics include:

 


·         Job strategies in a changing higher education landscape

·         Moving into Industry

·         Working overseas with your PhD

·         Teaching in Higher Education

·         Managing the PhD as a mature student

·         Publishing from your PhD


 

 

 

-----------------------------------------------------------

Dr Jan Mosedale

Chair of the Geographies of Leisure and Tourism Research Group (GLTRG)

Royal Geographical Society (with Institute of British Geographers)

 

University of Applied Sciences HTW Chur

Switzerland

 

Tel. +41 (0) 81 286 3901
Mail jan.mosedale@htwchur.ch

Web www.htwchur.ch/itf, www.janmosedale.com,

https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jan_Mosedale/

http://htwchur.academia.edu/JanMosedale

 

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Fw: Annals of Leisure Research



Marija Lazarev Zivanovic
MBA & LRG Dissertation Lead
Les Roches Gruyère University of Applied Science
Glion Institute of Higher Education
Rue l'ondine 20
1630 BULLE
Switzerland
Tel: 0041 26 919 78 78
Fax: 0041 26 919 78 39
Email: Marija.lazarevzivanovic@glion.edu
www.lrguas.ch

From: list-owner@mail.atlas-euro.org <list-owner@mail.atlas-euro.org> on behalf of Neil Carr <neil.carr@otago.ac.nz>
Sent: 16 February 2015 22:13
To: trinet-l@lists.hawaii.edu; leisurenet-group@griffith.edu.au; cals@uwaterloo.ca; SPORT-CULTURE-SOCIETY@JISCMAIL.AC.UK; list@atlas-euro.org
Subject: ATLAS list Annals of Leisure Research
 
Apologies as usual for multiple postings but wanted to let everyone know that the first issue of  Annals of Leisure Research for 2015 is now available online

:)

Critical commentary

·         Growing on the go? Moral development and tourism (Kellee Caton)

Articles

·         Are young people caught in the time bind? A sociological analysis of how young people in an upper secondary school view the issue of finding time to do sports or exercise in their spare time (Lone Friis Thing, Stine Frydendal Nielsen & Laila Ottesen)

·         Maintaining physical activity post-event? Case of the Tour of Flanders Cyclo in Belgium (Inge Derom, Robert VanWynsberghe & Jeroen Scheerder)

·         Service recovery and leisure events: implications from the cancellation of Ironman®New Zealand 2012 (Millicent Kennelly, Brent Moyle & Matthew Lamont)

·         Not in the picture: images of participation in New Zealand's outdoor recreation media (Robyn Zink & Maurice Kane)

·         Rural restructuring and its impact on community recreation opportunities (Jacquelyn Oncescu)

·         Using scaffolding to promote sport management graduates' critical thinking (Popi Sotiriadou & Brad Hill)

·         Mapping outdoor organizations' governance (Robyn Zink, Sally Shaw & Pip Lynch)

·         Leisure constraints in the university setting in Ghana (Issahaku Adam, Stephen Edem Hiamey & Ewoenam Afua Afenyo)

Classic book review

·         Leisure: the basis of culture (Kevin Bingham)

Book reviews

·         Leisure education: a person centered, system directed, social policy perspective (Mike Watkins)

·         Ethnomethodology at play (Esther Peperkamp)


Associate Professor Neil Carr

Associate Dean (Postgraduate)

Department of TourismOtago Business School. University of Otago. New Zealand

Managing Editor - Annals of Leisure Research

All round good guy (according to my dog at least)

Carr, N. (2014). Dogs in the Leisure Experience. Wallingford, UK: CABI. 

Dogs in the Leisure Experience