International Conference on Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Environmental Ethics: Implications for Peace-building and Sustainable Development: 28-30 April 2015, University of KwaZulu Natal, Durban, South Africa.
ORGANIZERS
The Africa Regional Programme of the United Nations University for Peace (UPEACE) in collaboration with the DST-NRF Centre for Indigenous Knowledge Systems (University of KwaZulu Natal) and the University of Rwanda (Rwanda).
CONFERENCE SUB-THEMES
·Environmental governance and implications for Peace, Justice and Human Rights
·Knowledge Systems and Environmental Ethics in the Context of Educational Transformation,
·Rural Development and Sustainable Livelihood
·Communication, Indigenous Languages and Power Relations
·Human Rights, Environmental Ethics and Peace-building
·Science and Technological Development: Implications on Environmental Ethics
·Indigenous Knowledge Systems, Climate Change and Food Security Systems: Implications on
Environmental Ethics.
·Indigenous Knowledge Systems, Gender and Environmental Ethics: Implications on Peace-Building,
Human Rights and Sustainable livelihood.
·Environmental Ethics: Implications on Global Health
SUBMISSION DATES
·Submission of draft papers: Friday, 06 March 2015
.Inform the selected papers: Friday, 13 March 2015
·Submission of final papers by : Friday, 10 April, 2015
WHO SHOULD ATTEND?
·Researchers
·Academics
·Postgraduate students
·Managers and policy-makers in Government, Inter-governmental and Non-governmental Organizations
·Research administrators
·Staff of Research Councils and Agencies
·Government Stakeholders
·NGOs
·Indigenous Knowledge holders and practitioners
·Development Agencies
·Private Sector
·Civic Organizations including the youth, women and disabled
PAPER SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
LANGUAGE
All manuscripts must be written in British English. Manuscripts submitted in American English will be edited for consistency.
LENGTH
Finished manuscripts should be between 6.000-7.000 words, including references. This will be somewhere between 20-25 single-sided, double-spaced manuscript pages. Papers exceeding 7.000 words will be edited for length.
STYLE
For notes and references, use the short-title system (not the author-date system) as per Butcher’s Copy-editing: The Cambridge Handbook for editors, Copy-editors and proof readers, 4th edn (2006). Example:
·Atiyah, PS, The Damages Lottery (Oxford, Hart Publishing, 1997)
·Atiyah, PS, ‘Personal Injuries in the Twenty-First Century: Thinking the Unthinkable’ in P Birks (ed), Wrongs and Remedies in the Twenty-First Century (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1996) 5–38
SUGGESTED PAPER OUTLINE
While the content and purpose of the chapter will ultimately dictate the arrangement of the material, we offer the following paper structure as a starting place. Keep this and any specific requests from the conference organizers in mind as you draft the paper.
ABSTRACT – 150-200 WORDS
INTRODUCTION AND PAPER “MAP.”
A brief overview of the paper, its theme, and purpose.
DEVELOPMENT OF YOUR TOPIC
What are the primary or related issues? Why is this topic important? Include historical or theoretical background or reference current debate, if relevant.
CURRENT OR PROPOSED SOLUTIONS.
Examples of model practice, ideas, or programs. Practical ideas that can be implemented on other areas are especially helpful.
Conclusions and recommendations to readers.
TABLES, FIGURES, APPENDICES
In some cases, you may find that tables, figures, or appendices are needed to fully develop a topic or make it more accessible to the reader. However the use of tables and figures should be limited. All tables, figures, and appendices should be appropriately referenced in the text and submitted with the manuscript for editorial review. While tables and figures may be embedded in the text, they should also be sent as separate files in the program in which they were created (e.g., Excel) so that they can be reformatted, if necessary, during the final production process.
QUOTES AND EXTRACTS
All material taken from previously published sources—whether quoted directly or paraphrased—should be appropriately cited in the text and be accompanied by a corresponding citation in the reference list. Quotes of more than 40 words are treated as blocks. Extracts of 300 words or more require the permission of the copyright holder to be included. Similarly, figures or tables that are reprinted from previously published work require the permission of the copyright holder to be included. You are responsible for securing the necessary permissions for such material.
AUTHORSHIP
Authors should include full names, brief biography (with institutional affiliation, and contact details, including mailing address and telephone number. The editors reserve the right to alter all manuscripts to conform to the guidelines to improve accuracy, eliminate mistakes and ambiguity, and to bring the manuscript in line with the tenets of plain English language.
CONTACT
For submissions and any clarifications please refer to any of the following contact persons:
1. Dr Mayashree Chinsamy – [email][email protected]
2. Dr Chika Ezeanya –[email protected]
3. Ms Tsega Desta – [email][email protected]
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