[spectre] Situated Technologies Pamphlets 3: Situated Advocacy

Mark Shepard markshepard at schizogeo.net
Fri Nov 7 22:32:27 CET 2008


Situated Technologies Pamphlets 3: Situated Advocacy
+ Community Wireless Networks as Situated Advocacy, Laura Forlano and  
Dharma Dailey
+ Suspicious Images, Latent Interfaces, Benjamin Bratton and Natalie  
Jeremijenko

Now available as a free PDF: http://www.situatedtechnologies.net/?q=node/88
Or buy a printed copy: www.lulu.com/content/4775753

Advocacy is the act of arguing on behalf of a particular cause, idea  
or person, and addresses issues including self-advocacy, environmental  
protection, the rights of women, youth and minorities, social justice,  
the re-structured digital divide and political reform.

Situated Technologies Pamphlets 3: Situated Advocacy considers how  
situated technologies have been—or might be—mobilized toward changing  
and/or influencing social or political policies, practices, and  
beliefs. What new forms of advocacy are enabled by contemporary  
location-based or context-aware media and information systems? How  
might they lend tactical support to the process of managing  
information flows and disseminating strategic knowledge that  
influences individual behavior or opinion, corporate conduct or public  
policy and law?

+++ About the Situated Technologies Pamphlets Series +++

Series Editors: Omar Khan, Trebor Scholz, Mark Shepard
Published by the Architectural League of New York

The Situated Technologies Pamphlet Series extends a discourse  
initiated in the summer of 2006 by a three-month-long discussion on  
the Institute for Distributed Creativity (iDC) mailing list that  
culminated in the Architecture and Situated Technologies symposium at  
the Urban Center and Eyebeam in New York, co-produced by the Center  
for Virtual Architecture (CVA), the Architectural League of New York  
and the iDC. The series explores the implications of ubiquitous  
computing for architecture and urbanism: how our experience of space  
and the choices we make within it are affected by a range of mobile,  
pervasive, embedded or otherwise “situated” technologies. Published  
three times a year over three years, the series is structured as a  
succession of nine “conversations” between researchers, writers and  
other practitioners from architecture, art, philosophy of technology,  
comparative media studies, performance studies, and engineering.

For more information about the series, visit www.situatedtechnologies.net

+++ About the Architectural League +++

The mission of the Architectural League is to advance the art of  
architecture.

The League carries out its mission by promoting excellence and  
innovation, and by fostering community and discussion in an  
independent forum for creative and intellectual work in architecture,  
urbanism, and related disciplines. We present the work and ideas of  
the world’s most interesting and influential architects and designers  
to New York, national and international audiences, through lectures,  
exhibitions, publications, and the worldwide web. We identify and  
encourage talented young architects, through competitions, grants,  
exhibitions, and publications. And we help shape the future of our  
built environment by stimulating debate and provoking design thinking  
about the critical issues of our time.

The Architectural League is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization  
supported by the National Endowment for the Arts; the New York State  
Council on the Arts, a State Agency; and the New York City Department  
of Cultural Affairs. League programs are also made possible by  
contributions from foundations, corporations, and League members and  
friends.

For more information about League programs, visit www.archleague.org.


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