The University of Milan in partnership with CSIL, Centre for Industrial Studies, and with the support of the European Union (Jean Monnet Chair), organizes the third edition of the Milan Summer School on: ‘Cost-benefit Analysis of Investment projects. EU Structural Funds, Cohesion Fund and Instrument of Pre-Accession’. The school will be held at Palazzo Greppi, in the heart of Milan from 3 to 6 of September 2013.

The school is designed for professionals and young researchers who are dealing with the programme and project management of EU Funds and for decision makers of major projects in the fields of transport, environment, industry, energy, telecommunications and culture. The training methods will consist of  face-to-face lessons and  hands-on sessions.

All lecturers invited participated in the preparation of the new edition of the Guide to Cost-Benefit Analysis of Investment Projects of the European Commission, DG Regional Policy, with professor Massimo Florio (University of Milan) as Scientific Director. Speakers include:

  • Gianni Carbonaro (European Investment Bank)
  • Ugo Finzi (CSIL)
  • Massimo Florio (University of Milan)
  • Silvia Maffii (TRT Trasporti e Territorio)
  • Wolfgang Münch (European Commission, DG Regional and Urban Policy) 
  • Davide Sartori (CSIL)
  • Silvia Vignetti (CSIL)

For further information and applications, please consult the leaflet and at the website:

 http://www.csilmilano.com/Summer-School/Summer-School.html

 

Organisation:

Rosa Carmosino

Tel.: 02796630 ext.19

Fax: 02780703

Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Call for Chapter Proposal Submission

Computational Approaches for Urban Environments (Geotechnologies and the Environment series by Springer)

 

Edited by

Marco Helbich,

GIScience, Institute of Geography,

University of Heidelberg, Germany

Jamal Jokar Arsanjani,

GIScience, Institute of Geography,

University of Heidelberg, Germany

 

Michael Leitner

Department of Geography & Anthropology,

Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, USA

 

Introduction

The quantitative modeling of urban environments is a rapidly developing and challenging field. Cities are highly dynamic and complex environments composed of several interrelated subsystems including housing markets, transportation, population, etc. Although urbanization will increase up to 80% within the next three decades according to United Nations reports, the interplay of these subsystems forming urban environments and affecting our society are only partially understood so far and research about them are of utmost importance. While geographic information system-based urban analyses have reached certain levels of maturity, the capabilities and limitations of data-driven computational approaches to support urban theories as well as policy- and decision-making have not yet been adequately addressed. Additionally, the recent technological progress is grounded in large and constantly increasing amounts of multi-dimensional digital data, inherently characterized by spatial and temporal dimensions. In this context, it is expected that cutting-edge computational methods linked to novel data sources promote a deeper understanding of urban areas and urban processes in order to support urban environments for a more sustainable future.

 

Objectives and Scope

The main objective of the intended edited volume is to seek high quality, scientific research chapters providing a wide array of urban-related subjects that contribute to the advancement of knowledge in the use of novel computational methods for the analysis of urban environments. Due to the inter- and trans-disciplinarity of the related domains as well as supporting a more holistic understanding of cities, submissions of chapter proposals from a broad range of scientific disciplines such as geography, economics, computer science, statistics, geographic information science, remote sensing, sociology, urban planning, and civil engineering are highly welcome from the Editors.

The edited book is scheduled to be published by Springer in its popular “Geotechnologies and the Environment” series, edited by Jay D. Gatrell and Ryan R. Jensen. For more detailed information about this series, we refer to the Springer webpage, accessible via the following link  http://www.springer.com/series/8088.

This book will cover several aspects of urban-related topics including the following fields of application:

- Population and social dynamics

- Urban transportation

- Housing and real estate

- Urban dynamics and growth

- Land use planning

- Crime and law enforcement

- Health

- Service planning

- …

The major prerequisite is that manuscripts should be based on cutting-edge computational approaches, including, but not limited to:

- Machine learning

- Neurocomputing

- Evolutionary computing

- Geosimulation and agent-based modeling

- Optimization

- Spatio-temporal modeling

- Regionalization

- Visual analytics

- Fuzzy logic

- …

Additionally, of particular interest are chapters dedicated to innovative data sources to enrich urban analysis. Topics of interest include but are not limited to:

- Cell phone data

- Volunteered / Contributed geographic information

- Social networks (e.g., Twitter, Flickr)

- Humans as sensors and collaborative sensing

- ...

 

Submission and Important Dates

All chapter proposals will be evaluated by a committee of experts before

author(s) are being invited to submit the full book chapter. Chapters must not have been published elsewhere. Unpublished conference presentations are acceptable. Published conference presentations (e.g., in a proceedings volume) may be acceptable if the full copyright can be transferred.

Submission procedure for chapter proposals:

Length:                                   1-3 pages

Format:                       Microsoft Word or Adobe PDF

Figures/Tables:           Must be legible (<300 dpi are accepted at this stage)

 

Important dates:

April 8, 2013:                         First solicitation of chapter proposal submission

May 30, 2013:                        Chapter proposal submission deadline

June 10, 2013             Notification of chapter acceptance (rejection) and invitation to submit the full book chapter

November 1, 2013:     Final chapter submission deadline

February 1, 2014:       Acceptance / rejection notification sent to author(s)

April 1, 2014:                         Final revised chapter submission deadline

July 1, 2014:               Expected publication of book

 

General:

Submissions must include the author's name, affiliation, mailing address, and e-mail address.

In the case of multiple authors, all names, addresses, etc., must accompany the submission and a single individual must be identified as the primary point of contact.

If submitting a published conference presentation (e.g., one that has already appeared in a proceedings volume), the author(s) must provide proof that the article's full copyright can be transferred. Submissions must be sent as an e-mail attachment to Marco Helbich using the e-mail address listed above.

 

Notification:

Notification regarding the status of each proposal will be sent by June 10, 2013 to all those who submitted a chapter proposal. At that time, authors whose chapter proposals have been accepted will also be e-mailed guidelines regarding full book chapter preparation.

Post-acceptance information:

The full book chapter deadline is November 1, 2013. Following receipt, full chapters will be sent out for double-blind review. The Editors will make the final decision regarding final acceptance of each book chapter.

All chapters with revision requests (if necessary) need to be completed by April 1, 2014.

 

Inquiries should be directed to

Dr. Marco Helbich

GIScience, Institute of Geography

University of Heidelberg

Berliner Straße 48

D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany

 http://www.geog.uni-heidelberg.de/personen/gis_helbich.html

 http://giscience.uni-hd.de

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Tel.: +49(0)6221 / 54 5572

Fax: +49(0)6221 / 54 4529

Heidelberg, April 5 2013

 

Call for Book Chapter Proposal Submission

 

RSAI is pleased to announce that the 2010 Dissertation prize has been awarded to Frank Neffke of the Erasmus University Rotterdam for his thesis on 'Productive Places, the influence of technological change and relatedness on agglomeration externalities'.

Congratulations Frank!

icon 2010 Dissertation Prize

Thursday, 24 November 2011 00:00

RSAI Newsletter November 2011 is now online

Dear all,

the new RSAI Newsletter November 2011 can now be found under

 http://www.regionalscience.org/Publications/RSAI-Newsletters/

 

Call for nominations for the 2013 William Alonso Prize - due by June 15, 2012

The Alonso Prize Committee invites nominations for the 2013 Alonso Prize. 

Although occasionally awarded to an article, the Alonso Prize is primarily a book prize that recognizes outstanding recent research contributions to regional science in the spirit of the work of Dr. William Alonso, author of Location and Land Use, often credited with launching the field of urban economics. Nominations may come from any individual or organization including book publishers, university departments, government agencies, and other public or private entities.

* The nominated work must be a book published in 2007 or later. An edited book will be considered only if it is tightly-integrated, not a loose collection of chapters.

* The nominated work may have single or multiple authors.

* Authors are encouraged to self-nominate, and jurors will not know which books were self-nominated.

* Previously nominated books may be re-nominated and will be considered anew.

* Five copies of the book must be received by June 15, 2012 at Alonso Prize, GeoDa Center, School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning, Arizona State University, Coor Hall, MC-5302, P.O. Box 875302, 975 S. Myrtle Avenue, Tempe, AZ 85287-5302.

* To nominate a book 

(1) send an e-mail to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. with citation information, such as William Alonso, Location and Land Use, Harvard University Press, 1964, 

(2) attach up to three published book reviews, if available, using pdf files, and 

(3) arrange for five copies of the book to be sent, either by the author or publisher. No letters of nomination or support are required, and, if provided, will not be sent to jurors. The selection criteria are innovation and expected impact.

The Prize Committee consists of: Prof. Luc Anselin, Chair, Arizona State University; Prof. Kyung-Hwan Kim, Sogan University; Prof. Amy Glasmeier, MIT; Prof. Philip McCann, University of Groningen, and Prof. Koichi Mera, Secretary and Treasurer, ex-University of Southern California. 

For all inquiries, please contact Luc Anselin at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Further details on the Alonso prize can also be found at  http://www.narsc.org/newsite/?page_id=30.

 

Wednesday, 16 May 2012 00:00

RSAI Newsletter May 2012 is now online!

Dear all,

the new RSAI Newsletter May 2012 can now be found under

 http://www.regionalscience.org/Publications/RSAI-Newsletters/

 

logorevistap1The volume of Spring (number 22) of the journal of the Spanish Regional Science Association (AECR) Investigaciones Regionales is already available both on line (www.investigacionesregionales.com) and printable version. This last volume is a multidisciplinary and international compilation with papers both in Spanish and English. It contains six scientific-academic papers. Firstly, Alvarez, Myro and Vega analyze the delocation in the manufacturing sectors in the EU from the regional perspective (with a sample of 75 regions) and its effects on job losses during the 2000-2005 period. In the second paper, Moreno, Renart and Vidal endeavor to carry out a study of the weaknesses and errors detected by the European Court of Auditors (ECA) in the reports presented by 15 European countries on the economic and financial management of Structural Funds in the period 2000-2006. Casares, Coto-Millán and Inglada analyze the role played by the talent and the technology, with other exogenous factors such as diversity and territorial, on the economic development among the Spanish NUTS-3 regions. Natario, Almeida and Couto de Sousa examine through probabilistic econometric models the innovation processes of Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) in peripheral areas, particularly in the municipality of Guarda and in the Islands of the Azores in Portugal. Marti and Rodenas investigate the reasons that lead migrants to perform multiple migration in Spain in the period 2003-2005. Their probabilistic analysis indicates that repeated migration of nationals and non nationals respond to different reasons, such as labour experiences for non nationals and additional factors for the Spanish. In the last paper, Rubiera-Morollon, Fernandez-Vazquez and Aponte-Jaramillo estimate and analyze labour productivity in the Spanish cities. They propose the use of entropy econometrics to estimate urban income and productivity according to city size allowing them to measure agglomeration economics. In addition to these papers, this volume also contain two technical notes. In the first one, Duarte, Perez and Pfeilstetter deals with the currently widely discussed entrepreneurial orientation (EO) and investigates the roles this concept actually plays within the LEADER+ development program and its implementation in three European territories. In the second one, Clifton, Diaz-Fuentes, Fernandez-Gutierrez and Revuelta analyze from a regional perspective the use of Services of General Economic Interest (SGEI) to which general access in equal conditions is considered key for social and territorial cohesion by European regulation policymakers, particularly after privatization, liberalization and desregulation processes at the supply side. Finally, Boix and Lazzeretti display a panoramical review and state of the art of the creative industries at Spain, introducing the basic theoretical aspects, the measurement of creativity, compared data about production, employment and the location of creative industries, as well as the discussion about policy. A review of the book 'The political economy of interregional fiscal flows. Measurement, determinants and effects on country stability' and other news on books and related journals are also contained in the Spring volume of Investigaciones Regionales.

 

We have great pleasure in informing you that Peter Nijkamp has received a doctorate honoris causa from the University of the Algarve in Faro on Thursday, 14 June 2012. He got this highest sign of scientific recognition for his long-standing path-breaking contributions to regional science, his active role model for young scientists and his world-wide involvement with regional development issues. Peter Nijkamp is already doctor honoris causa at the Universities of Brussel, Athens and Bucharest.

peter honorus 

Jordi Suriñach, new president of the AECR The Spanish Regional Science Association-Asociación Española de Ciencia Regional has renewed the Board of the Asociación for the next

4 years. The new period will begin next 1st of july 2012 since june 2016. The new Board is:

President: Jordi Suriñach Caralt. University of Barcelona

Secretary: Miguel Angel Marquez Paniagua. University of Extremadura

Treasurer: Ruben Garrido Yserte. University of ALcalá de Henares.

 

Jordi Suriñach is Professor of Applied Economics, Director of the Research Institute of Applied Economics (IREA), and member of the AQR-IREA research group. He was the Chairman of the 51th Barcelona ERSA Conference in 2011.

 

Call for Applications - Editor-in-Chief,

Papers in Regional Science (PiRS)

The Regional Science Association International (RSAI) seeks candidates for the position of editor-in-chief of the official journal of the association, Papers in Regional Science. PiRS is a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal dedicated to advancing fundamental knowledge in regional science from its multiple theoretical and methodological perspectives, and is one of the highest ranked journals in the field of regional science. Candidates should be RSAI members who possess wide knowledge of urban and regional phenomena as well as distinguished records of scholarly contributions internationally. Candidates should also possess strong intellectual vision, leadership and organizational abilities, and experience relevant to editing a leading journal in the field of regional science. The appointment will start January 1, 2013 and continue for a three-year renewable term.

The editor’s primary responsibility is to continue to enhance the journal’s quality, reputation, and scholarship. The editor will be expected to leverage achievements of previous editorial teams, and strengthen the journal’s competitive position in support of RSAI’s worldwide mission. The editor will also demonstrate visionary leadership in developing editorial policies and initiatives that stimulate novel ways to theorize and analyze the changing reality of urban and regional environments so as to represent the full spectrum of high-quality research conducted worldwide in the regional science community.

PiRS is currently published by Wiley-Blackwell Publishing. The editor manages the editorial office, oversees the manuscript submission and review process and is responsible for the content, quality and timeliness of each issue of PiRS. The editor is responsible for maintaining PiRS editorial policies and procedures and establishing new policies and procedures as deemed appropriate to maintain the leadership of the journal.

The editor recommends an international team of associate editors and a book review editor to help administer the peer review process, promote excellence in content and advance editorial initiatives.

The PiRS editor reports to RSAI through the RSAI Council.

Detailed information on responsibilities and on the process for applying for the editor-in-chief position is available below.

Letters of interest must be received by July 30, 2012.

Specific duties of the Editor-in-Chief and journal editorial office include:

  1. Maintaining and updating the aims and scope of the journal, editorial policies, and guidelines to authors.

  2. Overseeing the manuscript peer review process through the publisher’s on-line submission portal in an unbiased, confidential, and timely manner.

  3. Checking proofs and revisions to proofs; proofreading.

  4. Preparing and forwarding accepted manuscripts to the publisher’s production department.

  5. Coordinating standards and practices across managing editors and managing the workload of each member of the editorial team.

  6. Maintaining close and regular contact with the publisher on marketing and production matters.

  7. Initiating and responding to correspondence with authors, managing editors, and reviewers.

  8. Recruiting, selecting, and appointing PiRS board members that reflect the diversity of regional science and addressing any performance issues.

  9. Soliciting guest issues, selecting guest editors, and providing advice and assistance to guest editors.

  10. Adhering to the page budget and financial structures set by RSAI. RSAI and the publisher are responsible for managing production, layout, printing, subscriptions, pricing and funding initiatives for society publications.

  11. Appointing associate editors and a book review editor (to be approved by RSAI Council). The editorial team (editor and associate editors) will be comprised of RSAI members with high stature and respect in the community, and with the expertise to manage the breadth of regional science.

  12. Serving as a non-voting ex officio member of RSAI Council and other regional science governing bodies.

  13. Chairing the jury of the annual Martin Beckmann Prize for the best article published in PiRS and managing the nomination and selection procedure.

  14. Reporting to RSAI Council through regular reports at Council meetings.

  15. Reporting to the journal editorial board through board meetings held at least once a year.

Application process:

Interested individuals should submit an application package that includes:

  • A succinct letter of interest and qualifications;

  • A vision statement for the next three to six years of publication of PiRS.

  • A statement of financial and/or time release support from the application’s employer;

  • A curriculum vitae;

  • The names and contact information of three references.

All requested information should be submitted by e-mail as a single PDF file to Professor Jean-Claude Thill, RSAI Vice President and PiRS Editor Search Committee Chair, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

For questions related to the position and to the selection process, please contact Professor Jean-Claude Thill, RSAI Vice President and PiRS Editor Search Committee Chair, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

About Us

The Regional Science Association International (RSAI), founded in 1954, is an international community of scholars interested in the regional impacts of national or global processes of economic and social change.

Get In Touch

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University of Azores, Oficce 155-156, Rua Capitão João D'Ávila, 9700-042 Angra do Heroísmo, Azores, Portugal

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