Etelä-afrikka: kehitysvammakongressi

Aika
30.8.2008

IASSID World Congress 2008

Monday 25th-30th August, Cape Town

-> Kongressin www-sivut -> Ohjelma

IASSID are very pleased to announce that the next IASSID World Congress will be held in Cape Town, South Africa. For information about all the wonderful sights around Cape Town go to the tourist office website at www.tourismcapetown.co.za

The World Congress venue is CTICC, the Cape Town International Conference Centre, a beautiful modern conference centre. In order to see the venue go to www.cticc.co.za for a virtual tour.

The conference management will be conducted by the University of Cape Town conference management centre. The conference management centre website is at www.uct-cmc.co.za . The Local Organising Committee includes four distinguished South African members of IASSID: John Cruickshank, Jennifer Cartwright, Jennifer Kromberg and Chris Molteno.

David Felce (IASSID President) and Glynis Murphy (IASSID President-Elect) visited Cape Town at the end of last August 2006. The visit was timed to be on the same dates as the conference will be, so as to check on the weather at that time of year (it was good, mostly sunny).

Posters and postcards advertising the conference have been sent out to IASSID council members (please let Glynis Murphy - email g.h.murphy@kent.ac.uk - know if you would like more of either of these). A number of journals have also advertised the conference for us and more adverts will be rolling out over the next year.

The Congress Programme will be structured much as it has been in previous years, with plenary speakers, parallel sessions for symposia and papers, and posters. To see the draft Congress Programme and plenary speakers scroll further down this page.

The first announcement is already out and is being emailed to IASSID members. The booking form will be ready in June 2007. Abstracts may be submitted from September 1st 2007 and the closing date for abstracts will be the end of December 2007.

IASSID is funding some research into intellectual disabilities in Africa. It has pledged $30,000 to support research projects. To read more about the research fund and the research projects recommended for scroll down to links below.