Showing posts with label conference. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conference. Show all posts

Wednesday, 13 August 2014

Colorado Rocks! Attending a research meeting on sedimentary systems

By Lucy Clarke (@DrLucyClarke)
  
Continuing the blog series looking at what we have been getting up to this summer...

Last week I was lucky enough to be in the US for a research conference and I'm sharing my experiences of this with you in this blog post. This was a specialist meeting, with about 50 people attending, focusing on the “Autogenic Dynamics of Sedimentary Systems” – so basically the importance of internal processes (i.e autogenic processes) in driving change in natural systems and how this is recorded in the 'rock record'.

You may be asking yourself... why is it important to understand what's recorded in the rock record? Well, geologists use this information to reconstruct long term environmental change. Layers of material are laid down through time and over lengthy time periods these form the rocks that we see all around us (i.e. a sedimentary system). By examining the grain size, composition and structures in these rocks it can tell us information about the type of processes that formed them and what the climate was like at the time using a technique called stratigraphy. So it's important to know not only how things like climate and tectonics can influence the sediment build up and preservation as it turns to rock, but also what effect other internal processes can have on this so that a correct interpretation can be made.


Stratigraphic profile from Colorado National Monument showing a fluvial section with thick layers of floodplain with thinner, coarser bands of channel material in between
The aim of the meeting was to bring together an interdisciplinary group of researchers from ecology, geochemistry, geography, geology, and palaeontology to look at the research advances that have been made in different sedimentary systems to evaluate what, if any, ‘autogenic’ signals can be determined. Presentations covered a range of topics and included field, numerical modelling and experimental approaches that were being used to try and tackle this problem.

I presented the research that I introduced in my blog on 28 August 2013: What drives change on alluvial fans? I talked about how my experiments showed that internal processes within these landforms caused observable changes in the flow patterns. 

The sessions were really interesting and thought provoking. It was designed to be a discussion rather than just a one-way presentation of information from the speakers, consequently we had lots of time for asking questions supplemented by break out groups to follow up on ideas and think about the 'bigger picture'. I found this particularly useful as it helped me to generate new ideas as to how to develop my own research, as well as starting to think about the wider implications of my research. Additionally having the opportunity to talk to people from other related, but slightly different disciplines, has certainly broadened my perspectives.

Looking over the Colorado River to the city of Grand Junction (to the left) and the Grand Junction Main Street (to the right)
The meeting was held in the city of Grand Junction - situated in central Colorado, the town sits on the Colorado River with lots of wineries and agricultural land surrounding it. Grand Junction is a small traditional mid-West town with a population of about 60,000 that boasts a university and a quaint main street that has a night market every Thursday evening during the summer. Temperatures were around 30°C every day and despite a couple of thunderstorms at the start of my trip the weather was great. Close to the town is the Colorado National Monument, this is a national park about 85 km2 in size, containing stunning mesas and canyons. As part of the conference we were treated to a field day to experience the park's impressive geologic formations and see if we could explore, and apply, some of the conference themes in a field setting.

Colorado National Monument: looking over the national park (left) and geologists looking at a rock section showing preserved sand dunes (right)
I thoroughly enjoyed my week in Colorado. I got to explore a new area but most of all I made new connections for my research with the potential for new collaborations in the future. I learned about lots of current research from different, but related, areas that I hadn’t previously been aware of, which has rejuvenated my own research in this area - so all round it was a successful trip!

Enjoying the sunshine on the field day in Colorado National Monument



Wednesday, 18 June 2014

Transitional ecopreneurs – a conference in Sweden, June 2014 (#ecopreneurs2014)

by Kirstie O'Neill

I am recently back from a really stimulating conference in Sweden, discussing the role of green entrepreneurs (aka ecopreneurs) with people from many different academic backgrounds and many different geographical places.  The idea behind the conference came from Martin Hultman, a research fellow at Umea University, Sweden.  He got in touch with me a few years ago now, after reading my University webpage on the research I was doing with David Gibbs (blogged here).  So, writing departmental webpages is useful and can lead to unexpected places!

Kerstin Uddes, Sweden (author's photo)
So, writing a few paragraphs on the UoH GEES website led to me being on the organising committee for the symposium entitled ‘Transitional green entrepreneurs: Re-thinking ecopreneurship for the 21st century’, which finally materialised into the conference on 2-5th June 2014.  The conference was held in a Swedish cooperatively-run health spa (think health benefits of the outdoors rather than manis and pedis!), which provided a beautiful and inspiring setting for a conference (and may have helped attract a few participants!).  Being this far north in Sweden in June, it never got dark, so sleeping was a challenge.


Picnic of local goats cheese and typical Swedish breads (author's photo)
Opening the floodgates! And getting the mill stones turning (author's photo)

In addition to the ‘proper’ work of the conference, and unusually for social scientists, we got the opportunity to get outside and enjoy the fresh air of Northern Sweden.  This included a visit to a goat farm for some, while others went on a forest walk and had a picnic around a campfire.  The highlight for many of us, was a beaver safari by kayak, going across the lake and into rivers feeding the lake where beavers lived.  So many people wanted to go on the safari that we had to split into two groups – I (rather foolishly) volunteered to go with the early morning one – a 4am departure!  We got to see a few beavers enjoying the early morning and playing around in the riverJ



Evidence of beavers - this was a huge tree some distance from the river 

So, what do we mean by ‘ecopreneurs’?  Green entrepreneurs (or ecopreneurs) and the idea of a green economy more broadly are increasingly seen as an important strategy for reducing our reliance on fossil fuels and for combating the recession.  The popular media and a small, but growing, set of academic literature have argued that these entrepreneurs are leading a shift to a new green economy and helping to address fears over global warming, climate change and the associated negative environmental impacts.  However, both popular accounts and academic research have placed too much emphasis on the role of the lone individual or the ‘entrepreneur as hero’ approach, as well as relying heavily on anecdotal evidence.  In particular, charismatic individuals such as Anita Roddick (Body Shop), Yves Chouinard (Patagonia) or Dale Vince (Ecotricity) have come to be viewed as icons.  Many of the people at this conference, including our own research paper, are working to develop a more detailed and nuanced picture of ecopreneurship.

In a forthcoming paper (O’Neill and Gibbs), we argue that ecopreneurs are a diverse set of actors whose motivations, ethics and practices can vary significantly, indicating a more complex picture than has previously been recognised. 

We had three days of interesting talks, with keynotes from Robert Isaak, who was one of the first to publish on ecopreneurs, and Anne de Bruin, a NZ economist with a particular interest in sustainability entrepreneurship.  We also had talks from local ecopreneurs and social activists, such as Sofia Jannok, a Sami singer working to protect Sami rights to land in northern Scandinavia – her singing and images were a haunting reminder of the impacts of modern development on some rural areas and those who live in them.  Torbjörn Lahti spoke of his work to develop ecopreneurial activities in his community, in response to declining population and lack of local employment opportunities – his work and initiative has been popular and has led to projects in many overseas countries.  What I found particularly inspiring was the gender balance - there were more women than men, all doing interesting, critical research (of course, the men were too, but women are usually under-represented).

Sofia Jannok singing and talking about the Sami homelands and folklore (author's photo)

In combination with the wide range of papers that were given by the participants, we left the conference feeling that ecopreneurship was a much wider phenomenon than we might have imagined when we arrived.  Many participants were from business school backgrounds, but the range of perspectives covered during the conference made it clear that ecopreneurs are having social, political, economic and environmental benefits!  The conference was a really inspiring event with many people saying they would like to meet again to continue the conversation...in the meantime, we are planning a book including many of the papers, and a special issue of the journal Small Enterprise Research is planned.

View from the jetty with  hot tub, sauna and ladder to the lake - we didn't want to leave! (author's photo)

Wednesday, 30 April 2014

Of gribbles and fish oil: plants and future security


By Lindsey Atkinson (@LJA_1)

In the week that the latest report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was issued (31.03.2014) with its emphasis on risks and the importance of adaptation, the UK Plant Sciences Federation  (UKPSF) held their 2014 conference ‘Plant Science – Sustaining Life on Earth’ at the University of York.  This conference brings together a wide range of plant scientists from ecologists to molecular biologists and gives them the opportunity to share their knowledge across disciplines.

A key theme of the conference was food security1 and how plant science may help to meet some of the challenges we face.  The conference was opened with a keynote lecture from Prof Tim Benton (University of Leeds) on ‘Feed, food and fuel: plants and future security’ where he gave us an overview of some of these challenges.  Drivers of change include the growth in global demand for food, globalization and the changing climate.  Combine this with soil degradation and these things add up to make future food supplies look very uncertain!  On the other side of the coin, it’s not just about food supplies, but also about waste.   Some of these themes were echoed in Prof Peter Gregory’s (East Malling Research/University of Reading) talk in which he looked at the importance of sustainable agriculture and reducing waste and loss. 

Some of the headline figures from the recently published UKPSF report Status of UK Plant Science: Current Status and Future Challenges include:
  •  ‘There will be 2.4bn extra people to feed by 2050’
  •    ‘Global food production must increase by 60-110% to meet this demand’
  •    ‘Up to 40% of global crop yields are lost to plant pests and diseases each year’
  •    ‘Agriculture accounts for 70% of the world’s fresh water use’
  • ‘By 2030, global energy demand is predicted to rise by 40%’

At one level these challenges need to be tackled through politics and economics but plant scientists are using their knowledge and creativity to contribute too, which brings us back to gribbles and fish oil…

Gribbles are small, marine, wood-boring crustaceans and wouldn’t normally make an appearance at a plant science conference.  However, understanding and using their digestive enzymes may increase the efficiency with which we can break down woody materials to produce biofuels (read more). 

We also learned that fish oil isn’t made by fish – yes, you guessed it – it is made by plants (in this case marine algae) and accumulated by the fish.   Using fish as a source of these fish oils for fish farming is not sustainable but using transgenic crops could be… (read more).  

There were many more examples of how plant scientists are working to improve crop yield and yield stability, water and nutrient use in agriculture and the nutritional value of crops.  There is also a lot of current research on using plants as factories to produce additional nutrients and biofuels.  You can find more details of all the topics covered at the conference at http://plantsci2014.org.uk/programme/

The future for plant scientists in the UK was the topic for a debate chaired by Dr Sandy Knapp of the Natural History Museum.  Although great strengths were recognized in the plant science research community, it was noted that it has an ageing population and skills shortages are predicted.  The importance of inspiring students from an early age was emphasized with calls for greater inclusion of plant science in the curriculum at both school and in higher education.  The next challenge is once inspired, providing the opportunities to keep scientists in this area.
The panel (from L to R): Sarah Gurr (University of Exeter), Jim Beynon (University of Warwick),  Sandy Knapp (Natural History Museum, London),  Mark Chase (Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew), Mike Bushell (Syngenta) and Dale Sanders (John Innes Centre).


The conference closed with a final talk from Prof Jackie Hunter, Chief Executive of the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), who gave her view of a 21st Century Vision for Plant Science to tackle challenges in sustainable crop production.

1Food Security was defined at the World Food Summit of 1996 as occurring “when all people at all times have access to sufficient, safe, nutritious food to maintain a healthy and active life(http://www.who.int/trade/glossary/story028/en/).  

Wednesday, 15 January 2014

Christmas is a time for...conferences.

By Rebecca Williams (@volcanologist)

Christmas for academics is a time for family, eating a bit too much and relaxing before the inevitable marking chaos starts during the January exam period. Some use the time away from teaching to go on field trips or to write a paper that’s been neglected during a semester. For many, it’s also conference season.  Many of the Geological Society of London’s specialist groups hold their conferences during the Christmas ‘vacation’. This year for me was a double whammy, kicking off the holidays with the British Sedimentological Research Group (BSRG) meeting here at the University of Hull, and then heading up to Edinburgh to start the New Year at the Volcanic and Magmatics Study Group (VMSG) meeting.
Left: The BSRG field trip to Flamboro Head (photo credit to Dan Parsons @bedform)
Right: The BSRG conference dinner at The Deep, Hull (photo credit to Rob Thomas)
It was quite poignant to have BSRG here at Hull. In 1989, the Annual General Meeting (AGM) was planned at Hull, but the Geology department fell foul of the Government’s Earth Science Review and was closed. BSRG instead went to Leeds. This year, Geology is back in Hull. 2013 saw the start of BSc Geology with Physical Geography and 2014 will see the start of single honours BSc Geology. The conference kicked off with an excellent keynote speech from Dan Bosence who summarised a lifetime’s work on Carbonate Depositional Systems and our latest knowledge on these systems. That started a session of plenary lectures on novel advances in Sedimentology. This was my first BSRG conference and so it was great to listen to the latest cutting-edge research on such a wide range of sedimentological settings: from submarine channels to microbial biofilms to mass extinctions related to Chinese volcanism via drones (sorry, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles). The plenary set the tone for the rest of the conference. Given that I was still teaching during this week and that I was swamped in marking, I missed the apparently brilliant ice breaker in the Brewery Wharf microbrewery on Wednesday night and the conference dinner in the The Deep Aquarium, Hull’s premier tourist attraction. I was able to present some of my work on pyroclastic density currents (essentially, a summary of my latest paper – blog coming soon!) in the “Turbidites, Debrites and Mass Flows – dynamics and deposits” session. It was the first time I’d presented this work to sedimentologists, which was a bit nerve wracking. I got some great feedback though so it was worth the nerves! I also missed out on the field trip to the spectacular exposures along the Yorkshire Coast between Bridlington and Scarborough, led with help from the Hull Geological Society.
Top left: One of the groups on the VMSG field trip at Holyrood Park, on their way to Salisbury Crags
Top right: Hutton's section at Salisbury Crags, note the broken sedimentary 'bridge'.
Bottom left: The winning University of Hull duck - see this Storify/Twitter summary of the Volcanic Duck Race
Bottom right: VMSG conferences (and geologists in general?) now go hand in hand with a good Ceilidh.
This year is VMSG’s 50th Birthday and the anniversary year started off with a bumper conference in Edinburgh. This year saw 5 days of volcanology and magmatic conferencing, starting off with a trip to blustery Arthur’s Seat. We got to see some classic geology including Salisbury Crags and Hutton’s section where he demonstrated that intrusions were once liquid magma that had forced their way into surrounding sediments and then crystallised, leading in part to his 1788 book Theory of the Earth and his recognition as the Father of Geology. The conference itself was opened with the Hallimond Lecture given by Sally Gibson on ‘Continental rifting and mantle exotica’ as part of a session on Intraplate and Continental rifting dedicated to the late Barry Dawson. The theme of the conference was 50 years of VMSG and so the sessions followed those at the very first VMSG conference (then VSG) with some modern sessions such as Planetary Volcanism and Volcanic Hazards and Risks, reflecting some of the new directions the science is now going in. I presented my on-going work on the Louisville Seamounts, drilled during IODP Expedition 330 (some of which I’ve blogged about before). Highlights of the conference included the VMSG Award Lecture from Jon Davidson on ‘Interrogating crystals to understand magma systems’ with a plea for people to not forget and abandon fundamental petrology, and the VMSG Lifetime Achievement Award Lecture from Steve Sparks on a lifetime’s work of ‘Integrating disciplines, models, experiments and observations to understand volcanic processes’ with a special shout-out to all the young researchers who will be the future of VMSG research. The ice breaker saw the official launch of Volcano Top Trumps with the excellent Volcanic Duck Race which was won by our University of Hull duck! We were also treated to a dinner and ceilidh at Our Dynamic Earth, Edinburgh’s excellent interactive exhibit about the planet we live on. To finish up the conference, the microanalysis facilities at the University of Edinburgh opened their doors to us and delivered an excellent workshop on techniques such as the Ion Microprobe (SIMS) and the Electron Microprobe.

Both of these conferences have the same ethos at their heart: they showcase outstanding UK research on an increasingly international stage, are supportive of the student members with significant proportions of oral presentations given by students, and they are always full of social occasions in which to meet with old and new colleagues. Whilst they seem to cover completely different specialisms, for a volcanologist who looks at volcaniclastic deposits, there is a strong cross over...perhaps in the future there is potential for a joint session at one or the other of these conferences? I certainly hope so.


This is a fantastic video of the Volcanic Duck Race filmed by Thermal Vision Research Ltd.

Wednesday, 16 October 2013

Conferences from the inside

by: Drs M. Jane Bunting and Michelle Farrell

Between August 5th and 9th, we were the hosts and organisers for a small conference with associated workshops (small = 35 people on the busiest day).  Organising a conference makes the experience of being at the event quite different - for a start, some days you don't even get close enough to the coffee table at break to grab a biscuit!

The meeting was supported by the Crackles Bequest Project, which pays Michelle's salary at the moment.  The goals of the conference are described here.  We'll write more about the research later as we get final results and work on the papers; this blog post is about the experience of organising a small conference.

The process began in January when we sent out emails checking the availability of our project partners (a wonderful group of people who provided all sorts of support for fieldwork in different parts of Europe, arranging permits, translating, bringing their students and colleagues along to help our team with the actual work, and being enthusiastic about what we are trying to do, which really helps when you're half-way up a mountain in the driving rain or crawling around in a haymeadow in thirty degree heat trying to identify a lot of very small green leaves, which does tend to start you wondering why this ever seemed like a good idea). We then set the dates so that as many of these people as possible could come, and began to plan in earnest.

The 'who can come when' spreadsheet was just the first of many.  We had to work out how much to charge for registration at the meeting, to cover printing abstract volumes and lecture handouts, provide copies of software and pens, and of course the all-important regular infusions of caffeine (and biscuits) to keep everyone alert.  We got quotes for a conference dinner and developed teaching plans for the workshops.  We booked rooms on campus, contacted the local conference bureau to get their help with negotiating some cheap rates with local hotels, and put together an advertisement to send out to the pollen-counting community via various mailing lists.  We even had lists of the lists we needed to make!

Although it felt like we did a lot of planning in advance, and the deadlines for booking to attend the conference and to get the hotel rates were relatively early on the 31st of May (over two months before), the week before the event ended up being manic.  I really should be used to that by now, but it always takes me by surprise.

Michelle demonstrates field methods in a field
We had fun stuff to do, for example sitting down with the menus from the campus catering service and choosing the options for the lunches (why yes, there WAS a chocolate option on the sweet platter every day, and twice it was brownies).  Michelle had a never-ending stream of emails - the pricing policies of the UK's railway system are baffling at the best of times, but trying to help someone travelling from abroad to find the best value ticket makes you question the sanity of the person who came up with it (or maybe they were just feeling particularly misanthropic that day?), and advising people who come from locations with very predictable weather on the possible conditions during the field day ("honestly, it could be pretty much anything, although snow is unlikely") reminds us that our normal is not anyone elses.  Friday afternoon found us settled in the committee room in our building with piles and piles of paper all over the big tables, assembling the handouts for the workshops - I got a bruise on the palm of one hand from banging the hole-puncher (yes, I should have done smaller wodges of paper, but then I'd not have got home before midnight) and Michelle stuck name labels on folders, assembled badges, and cut out individual slips of paper showing the menu choices for the conference dinner (we decided that would be easier than taking the spreadsheet to the venue or hoping people would remember what they'd chosen).  We moved furniture and put up signs pointing to the various rooms being used, and finally got to go home.

Attendees in the quad
I remember how hot the computer room got during afternoon practicals, an Indian attendee huddled in a coat after the dinner while the rest of us enjoyed the cool of the evening (it was about 18oC by my car's temperature gauge - pretty cold if you come from the tropics I guess), some fabulous pictures of landscapes in a presentation about new work beginning in South Africa and some lovely data from more advanced projects, talking about science until my throat ached (and if you know me that's a LOT of talking) and a lot of laughing.  So here are a few pictures:

Before a session starts (in the earth science lab)

A summer's evening in the Hull docks area

As usual for conferences, people began to travel home at different points on Thursday, and by Friday afternoon only those who'd both stayed for the last workshop and had further to travel were still around.  We decided to meet up at a pub in Hull's docklands, where people could have fish and chips for supper if they wanted - obviously pub fish and chips are not as good as those purchased from a van (or shop in obscure location, depending on your particular favourite) and eaten out of paper, but they do come with beer.  Sitting around a table talking, teasing and gossiping like a group of old friends even though we'd mostly been strangers at the start of the week really brought home one of the benefits of this job to me - meeting other people who share the same strange interests and curiosity about how the physical world works, and having them become friends as well as colleagues.

Organising this meeting was a huge amount of work - I think we've finally dealt with the last of the expenses claims and bits of paperwork, and can sign off on the last spreadsheet, now it's October.  However, it is also very rewarding - all the intellectual stimulation of a conference PLUS you still get to sleep in your own bed, and don't have to put your pets in kennels.  But maybe we can all go to India or South Africa next time?


Friday, 30 August 2013

Happy Birthday BES!

Celebrating 100 years of the British Ecological Society
By Dr Lindsey Atkinson (@LJA_1)

This year the British Ecological Society is 100 years old. It is the oldest ecological society in the world and its aims are ‘to advance ecology and make it count‘.  To mark the occasion there have been a series of events celebrating ecological science and research and promoting public engagement through the Festival of Ecology The celebrations also included a major international conference: ‘Ecology: into the next 100 years’.  

This was the 11th International Congress of the International Association for Ecology (INTECOL 2013) bringing together about 2000 ecologists from around the world (including myself and two GEES colleagues) to give 1000 talks and present over 500 posters.

So why are we talking about an ecology conference on GEESology?  One thing that came across at this conference was the sheer diversity of the topics covered by the broad umbrella of ecology.  The themes ranged across theoretical and applied ecology, conservation management and public policy.  Specific topics included sustainable agriculture, sustainable cities, biodiversity, ecosystem function, biogeography, climate change ecology and public policy, poverty alleviation and much more, linking in to many of the interests of GEESologists.

In the introductory session Professor Georgina Mace, President of the BES, welcomed the delegates in the Capital Auditorium of the ICC London ExCel Centre (last year the venue for the Olympic boxing, wrestling and fencing).  She was followed by the President of Intecol, Professor Alan Covitch, who outlined challenges for ecologists for the next 100 years emphasizing the vital role of communication between disciplines.  Finally, Professor Ilkka Hanski of the International Scientific Committee of the Congress emphasized the need for ‘solid ecological knowledge’ to inform ‘well-educated decision makers’.

The conference then got under way with an excellent first plenary lecture given by Professor Sandra Diaz of Cordoba National University in Argentina.  Professor Diaz discussed using a plant functional trait approach to describe patterns of diversity at a global scale.  The aim is to provide a framework for predicting the response of ecosystems to environmental change and the impact that this will have on the services those ecosystems provide.   Another highlight of the conference was Professor Mace’s Presidential Address ‘Looking forwards not backwards: biodiversity conservation in the 21st Century’ – you can read a summary of her talk on the BES blog.

The Sex & Bugs & Rock 'n Roll Roadshow has been touring
 music festivals this year to tell people about ecology
The opportunity for everyone to get involved in ecology was highlighted during the week through sessions about 'citizen science'.  No need to be an expert as the information you will need is provided, often via the internet or an ‘app’.  The data contributions are validated and interpreted by scientists.  Examples include the Treezilla project which aims to map all the trees in the UK and shows how they benefit the local environment and Conker Tree Science, mapping the spread of an invasive moth which is damaging our horse chestnut trees. There are citizen science projects monitoring birds, pollinators, ponds and hedgerows and many others – perhaps there’s one to spark your interest!

Over the next few days we listened to more plenary talks from leading scientists as well as talks by scientists at all levels from graduate students to emeritus professors, participated in workshops, discussed our posters, caught up with old friends and met new people.  Even with the help of the ‘app’ to negotiate the programme it wasn’t possible to go to everything of interest.  At times it felt a little too busy with so much going on but the advantage of going to such a broad-ranging conference is being able to dip into other sessions to learn something about a new topic area and making connections with colleagues in other disciplines.  We went home tired but inspired to explore new work directions!

Friday, 2 August 2013

On the academic condition…

Today we have a guest blog by Prof David Atkinson (@DavideAtkinson) with some musings on the academic condition inspired by a recent conference trip to Chile.


I am recently returned from a conference trip to Santiago, Chile.  As often happens on these kind of solitary journeys to conferences, the long hours in the air and the slivers of time found in cafés, restaurants or airport-terminals en route often prompts me to reflect on the nature of our academic lives – on what we could label ‘the academic condition’.  I share some of the thinking I did here...  

 

I had a great time in Chile.  The conference was entitled Patrimonio y Territorio (heritage / memory and territory) and was convened by the National Monuments Council and the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council of Chile.  It was coherent and impressive – with some excellent papers and workshops, and good attendance and questions.  I was especially intrigued by the practice of submitting questions to the panel chair on slips of paper – a method designed to stop endless, rhetorical questioning from the floor, but which results in anonymous, disembodied questions with only the handwriting betraying something of the questioner.  I think my paper and the workshop focussed on my work went well.  We had an excellent field-visit to cultural centres in Valparaiso on the Pacific coast.  I did some research visits to sites memorialising the victims of Pinochet’s regime, and I undertook some public relations visits and interviews for my hosts.  I came home pleased.    
I also liked the city, the country and the Chilenos I met.  Of course at the conference I encountered well educated academics and professionals from the cultural sector for much of the time; but I also took a tour of Santiago’s more left-field spaces with some student tour-leaders, and I chatted with other people in bars and restaurants.  Santiago is a rewarding city in many ways.  Its inflections of behaviour and style are distinctive (in contrast to Europe or North America), and this difference is enhanced because the globalising trends that have homogenised other cities haven’t washed over Santiago as much as most European cities.  There’s a clearly visible tradition of sociability that’s performed in the markets and public spaces, while Chile’s various cycles of wealth and economic struggle are written into the capital’s architecture.  The struggle to represent and remember Pinochet’s military regime is also very distinctive– in part because it is still so raw and emotive for many (the regime lasted until 1990).  All of this made Santiago a fascinating place.
This trip also reminded me of one of the better aspects of academic life.  I like international academic exchange.  I find the flow of ideas and research between different academic traditions particularly rewarding – and events like this conference remind me of this most forcefully.  In part this may be because I did my PhD and much of my subsequent research on Italian topics – in a foreign language geographical tradition.  And while I usually enjoy conferences in the Anglophone world, I sometimes find the academic approaches they offer are less differentiated, and the debates are much more familiar and predictable, than conferences elsewhere in the world.  Of course, I can’t appreciate the nuance of the routine and the familiar in Chile, and I won’t notice their competitiveness and parochialism in the way that I sometimes see it erupting at Anglophone conferences.  I’m also sure what I’m describing is rather superficial ‘academic tourism’ in some respects.  But I’m nevertheless fascinated by good conferences in foreign language traditions: you never quite know what’s coming – and good papers are additionally interesting due to their difference from our ‘normal’ Anglophone circuits of communication, debate and positioning.   
These days however, my pleasure at being away at conference, and especially at being immersed in a different, surprising flow of ideas and perspectives, is book-ended by the looming presence of ‘the job’ back home.  Increasingly I try to reduce my trips away and other excess responsibilities due to family reasons and workload matters – the perennial academic obsession with trying to balance work and life (and, incidentally, why don’t we talk about life-work balance?  Why does work always comes first in discussions of that little duet?).  Therefore, I find myself trying to cut down on conferences as part of a strategy to eliminate any unnecessary hassle.  
These trips are a hassle as they approach.  There are mundane jobs and duties that demand attention.  You (or at least I – for I’m sure others transact these tasks far better than me) have to clear your desk temporarily.  This means looking ahead to deadlines that fall in the period you’re gone and, increasingly, I find myself anticipating what might happen in the week away, and I set processes in place to accommodate any problems that may arise.  More prosaically, you have to pack, check the insurance and, for a trip like this, fill in University paperwork about contact details, risks and dangers.  You have to organise the money you’ll need, and tell the banks where and when you’ll be away.  I decide that this conference is probably an occasion for a suit and tie, so I have to dig those out.  I also negotiate creeping guilt about the environmental costs of the long-haul flights.  Most importantly, at home you have to square your absence from family and other responsibilities with the professional benefits of this performance.  And as departure nears, a parallel operation begins which entails organising extra childcare, school drop-offs and all the family duties I’ll be vacating for the week.  I’ll also miss my family, and my children and my partner all ask me why I have to go away for so long.  
And, of course, you have to write a paper: a good paper that engages the audience and leaves them with questions (to write on slips of paper).  The paper should also justify your host’s faith and investment in you.  When I reach Santiago I’m told that the monument commission undertook a two month search and reading exercise before inviting me as their keynote speaker – so I want to repay that faith.  To this end, the keynote paper should address the conference theme directly: it should point out the key debates and their shifting developments, and how, in this case, the Anglophone world thinks about heritage-memory-territory.  The paper should meld your research to the conference agenda and then, nudge this agenda forwards.  You need good images and a fluent visual presence for the big screens you’re bound to perform before.  Ideally, you should also come up with a question or issue to flourish at your audience at the end – something to make them think, and something that may echo through the next two days.  
These trips are also a hassle after the event.  Unless you deal with their insistent trickle while you’re away, you have to negotiate a flood of emails on your return.  These can encompass anything: urgent circulars requiring information, requests for references and reviews, postgraduate progress issues, undergraduate questions, research administration and, more plaintively, requests for help.  You also have to note and file those tasks that may be less immediate, but are still lumpen in their stolid, looming presence.  These days, you should also think about somewhere strategic to publish the conference paper – once it’s suitably dressed and finessed as ‘agenda-setting’.  You should also publicise your achievements to audiences at your institution and within your field.  And you have to sort out your expenses and tidy up the trip’s bureaucracy (two things I’m particularly bad at completing).  Finally, in this instance I’m faced by a hefty phone bill on my return and I start arguing with the phone company.
But for me, the bonus of such a conference trip, with its dedicated time and space, is a rare moment of focus on one academic task – and a task that we imagine is core to our professional lives: delivering a paper that draws on our research to make bigger claims about current debates.  It re-engages me with some of the research I’ve done in the past.  It reminds me of the interesting writing I’m supposed to be doing in the summer.  It also prompts bitter-sweet dreaming about possible future research that may, or may not, ever progress.  But in sum, it reminds me of many of the things I like most about the job.  And this is the big plus for me: despite the hassles of finding space, travelling for 25-26 hours each way and writing the paper, there’s the sudden, jolting reminder that working with these ideas is a key part of what academics should be about.   
So, I stand in suit and tie, before 220 Chilenos, in an large, austere, industrially-themed cultural centre in the Biblioteca de Santiago.  I’m presenting Anglophone theories of heritage, memory, space and territory and illustrating them with examples from my research in Rome, Trieste and, equally exotic for this audience, Hull and East Yorkshire.  I’m speaking through translators and there’s an overflow audience in the lobby outside, and, we’re told, some of the 400+ who couldn’t get tickets are watching this via a webcast, as are audiences in every province of Chile and at three Ecuadorian Universities.  At such moments, the incongruity of the event often hits me hard.  I’m part of this high-profile event locally, nationally and even in other parts of Latin America- but I’m all the way on the other side of the world from my normal circles.  And getting there has drained so much time, money and effort from all parties.  But then again, this is one of the prime currencies of the modern, academic world: the presentation, the visuals, the performance.  And, buried within this somewhere, is the exchange of ideas and perspectives – all sides are encountering different ways of conceptualising and negotiating the world.  And despite the hassle, this is what I like.  But there is a growing degree of hassle for those of us living in this academic condition.