Rural History 2010 An International Conference (Brighton, September 13-16, 2010
Publicado el 02-11-09.
Rural History 2010: second call for papers
University of Sussex, Brighton, UK, 13-16 September 2010

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Rural History 2010 will be the first international meeting of rural historians. The conference is open to all interested in the subject, however defined, as well as those working in cognate disciplines such as archaeology, environmental history or contemporary rural
development. There are no temporal or geographical imitations.
The conference website is up and running and the conference leaflet can be downloaded from there. Additional details of our aspirations, the conference arrangements and the procedures to be followed in submitting proposals can be found on the website. We welcome proposals for both three or four paper sessions and individual papers. The closing date for proposals is 11 January 2010. Conference proposals and academic enquires should be directed to me at r.w.hoyle@reading.ac.uk. |
Session proposals
We also invite proposals for two- or three-paper sessions or even linked sessions. In this event we require the names of the chairman and speakers, a short abstract of each paper (150-200 words) and a short cv of each participant including the chairman (150-200 words each). (The conference can, of course, supply a chairman if necessary.) We have made provision on the conference website for potential session organisers to canvass for others interested in contributing to their area of expertise. Proposals may also be made for individual papers where, again, an abstract of 150-200 words and a short cv should be supplied.
Closing date
The call for papers and session proposals will close on 1 December 2009
Making a proposal
Proposals should sent by email to Professor Richard Hoyle at r.w.hoyle@reading.ac.uk.
We will circulate a third call for papers in December when we will also announce the plenary speakers for the conference.
The website can be found at www.ruralhistory2010.org.
Richard W. Hoyle
Professor of Rural History,
Department of History,
University of Reading,
Whiteknights,
PO Box 218
Reading,
RG6 6AA
r.w.hoyle@reading.ac.uk
For Rural History 2010: www.ruralhistory2010.org |