Jeremiah Spence: Conference Presentations
Jeremiah Spence, Joseph Straubhaar, Sharon Strover, Nobuya Inagaki (all University of Texas, Austin), Viviana Rojas (University of Texas, San Antonio) and Robert Larose (Michigan State University). ICTs in the Borderlands: Language, Internet Adoption and Latino Immigrants. Association of Internet Research 10.0. Milwaukee, USA. 9 October 2009. (referred)
Joseph Straubhaar, Sharon Strover, Jeremiah Spence, Nobuya Inagaki, Robert Larose, Jennifer Gregg. The Internet and the Changing Borderlands: The case of rural broadband use in a small Hispanic Texas town on the U.S. - Mexico border. Communication Policy and Technology Section, International Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR), Stockholm, Sweden, July 20-25, 2008. (referred)
Jeremiah Spence and Joseph Straubhaar. Generational Shifts in Media Consumption among U.S. Latinos: Mobility, Education and Education. Ethnicity and Race in Communications Interest Group, International Communications Association (ICA) 2008 Convention, Montreal, Canada, May 22-26, 2008. (referred)
Joseph Straubhaar, Jeremiah Spence and Carlos Seabra. Taking the telecenter to the village and the school in Brazil. “When the Internet reaches the Villages” panel, International Communications Association (ICA) 2008 Convention, Montreal, Canada, May 22-26, 2008.
Jeremiah Spence. The growth of telecenters in Brazil and competing models for a national standard. IX International Congress of the Brazilian Studies Association (BRASA), Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, March 27 – 30, 2008.
Jeremiah Spence and Joseph Straubhaar. Framing Digital Divide Responses in Brazil: the Observatório Nacional de Inclusão Digital nationwide telecenter survey and Beyond. U.S. – Brazil Colloquium on Communications Studies, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, March 25 & 26, 2008. (presented by Jeremiah Spence)
Jeremiah Spence and Joseph Lopez. Creating User Interfaces to Map the Historic Developments of Social Capital in Austin from 1880-2000: Designing new tools to facilitate the examination of cultural, social and racial trends in the creation of a Technopolis. Exploring New Media Worlds Conference, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, February 29-March 2, 2008. (presented by Jeremiah Spence)
Jeremiah Spence. SecondLife.Brasil. AoIR 8.0 Doctoral Colloquium: Association of Internet Researchers International Conference. Vancouver, Canada. October 2007.
Jeremiah Spence. Orkut: a catalysis for the Brazilian internaut. AoIR 8.0: Association of Internet Researchers International Conference. Vancouver, Canada. October 2007.
Jeremiah Spence. Mapping the Digital Divide: Results from a National Survey of Telecenters. Brazil Week 2007, University of Texas at Austin. October 2007.
Viviana Rojas, Joseph Straubhaar, Juan Pinon, and Jeremiah Spence. Linguistic capital, migration and new media technologies. Siglo XXI Faculty Research Conference. University of Texas at Austin. March 2007. [Presented by Viviana Rojas]
Juan Pinon, Jeremiah Spence, Viviana Rojas, and Joseph Straubhaar. Immigration, generation, media and social mobility:
Connecting methodologies of family trajectories and socioeconomic genograms. Siglo XXI Faculty Research Conference. University of Texas at Austin. March 2007. [Presented by Juan Pinon]
Jeremiah Spence and Joseph Straubhaar. Trajectory vs. Generation: Using Socioeconomic Genograms to Understand Family Mobility, media and ICT use. 2006 National Communications Association Annual Convention, San Antonio, Texas, November 2006. [Presented by Joseph Straubhaar]
Viviana Rojas, Joseph Straubhaar, Juan Pinon, Jeremiah Spence, H. Erin Lee and Assem Nasr. Mapping Family Trajectory over Time: An Approach to the Accumulation of Cultural and Linguistic Capital and Media and ICT Use. 2006 2006 National Communications Association Annual Convention, San Antonio, Texas, November 2006. [Presented by Viviana Rojas]
Fabio Ferreira, Jeremiah Spence and Joseph Straubhaar. Overcoming the digital divide: a comparative analysis of projects in Austin and Salvador. 2006 National Communications Association Annual Convention, San Antonio, Texas, November 2006. [Presented by Joseph Straubhaar]
Joseph Straubhaar, Fabio Ferreira, and Jeremiah Spence. Comparing Government and NGO Digital Inclusion Initiatives in the U.S. and Brazil. Telecommunications Policy Research Committee (TPRC) 2006 Conference, Arlington, Virginia, September 2006. [Presented by Fabio Ferreira]
Jeremiah Spence and Joseph Straubhaar. Trajectory vs. Generation: Using Socioeconomic Genograms to Understand Family Mobility. 2006 American Communications Association, National Communications Association, and International Communications Association Conference of the Americas, Lima, Peru. August 2006. [Presented by Jeremiah Spence]
Viviana Rojas, Joseph Straubhaar, Juan Pinon, Jeremiah Spence, H. Erin Lee and Assem Nasr.. Mapping Family Trajectory over Time: An Approach to the Accumulation of Cultural and Linguistic Capital and Media Use. 2006 American Communications Association, National Communications Association, and International Communications Association Conference of the Americas, Lima, Peru. August 2006. [Presented by Viviana Rojas]
Jeremiah Spence and Vanessa Di Macedo Higgins. Toward the Development of Time-series Community Mapping of Information and Cultural Resources: Sample Applications in Austin, Texas and Sao Paulo, Brazil. 2006 American Communications Association, National Communications Association, and International Communications Association Conference of the Americas, Lima, Peru. August 2006. [Presented by Jeremiah Spence]
Jeremiah Spence. Genograms, Mapping and Life Histories. Comparative Seminar in Community Informatics, May 2006, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas.
Jeremiah Spence. Socioeconomic Genograms as a Tool for Examining Class Trajectory within Family Groups. Class and Mobility Panel, 2006 Southwestern Social Science Association, San Antonio, Texas.
Jeremiah Spence. Mapping cultural resources over 100 years in Austin. Graduate Student Panel, 2006 Southwestern Social Science Association, San Antonio, Texas.
Jeremiah Spence & Joseph Straubhaar. Trajectory v/s generation: Using genograms to understand people’s interactions with ICTs. Global Fusion 2005, Athens, Ohio. [Presented by Jeremiah Spence]
Viviana Rojas, Joseph Straubhaar, Jeremiah Spence, Juan Pinon, Erin Lee and Assem Nasr. Mapping families’ capital over time: An approach to their cultural reserves and cultural capital. Global Fusion 2005, Athens, Ohio. [Presented by Joseph Straubhaar]
Joseph Straubhaar, Jeremiah Spence and Martha Fuentes-Bautista. Minimarts, neighborhood and the public sphere in East Austin. Global Fusion 2005, Athens, Ohio. [Presented by Joseph Straubhaar]
Joseph Straubhaar , Martha Fuentes-Bautista, and Jeremiah Spence. Developing Distinct Social Models of the Internet in Latin America. Panel SMO0005. Latin American Studies Association Conference, October 9, 2004. [Presented by Joseph Straubhaar]
Martha Fuentes-Bautista, Joseph Straubhaar, and Jeremiah Spence. The Social Shaping of Internet from Below: NGOs and government’s roles in Internet development in Brazil and Peru. Communication and Technology Division, International Communication Association, San Diego, California, May 23-27, 2003. [Presented by Martha Fuentes-Bautista]
Martha Fuentes-Bautista, Joseph Straubhaar, and Jeremiah Spence. Rising Digital Divide Issues in the Era of Media Convergence: the Case of Brazil. 23rd Conference AMCR/AIECS/AIERI International Association for Media and Communication Research. Barcelona, Spain. July 2002. [Presented by Martha Fuentes-Bautista]
Joseph Straubhaar, Martha Fuentes-Bautista and Jeremiah Spence. Converging Print and Electronic Media in Brazil: The Rapid Rise of UOL (Universe Online) to Dominance as both ISP and Internet Content Provider in Brazil. International Communications Association, Seoul, South Korea. July 2002. [Presented by Martha Fuentes-Bautista]
Jeremiah Spence. Brazilian Internet Portals as Societal Dichotomies: An Analysis of Content Access Patterns. 2002 Latin American Studies Symposium at Birmingham Southern University, Birmingham, Alabama. [Presented by Jeremiah Spence]