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Personal Assistant:
Mrs Penny Driscoll,
email: p.driscoll21@herts.ac.uk

Email addresses:
l.floridi@herts.ac.uk
luciano.floridi@philosophy.ox.ac.uk

Academic address at UH:
Department of Philosophy
School of Humanities
University of Hertfordshire
de Havilland Campus
Hatfield
Hertfordshire AL10 9AB, UK

Academic address in Oxford:
St Cross College
St. Giles
Oxford OX1 3LZ, UK


UNESCO Chair in Information and Computer Ethics
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AHRC Project (2009-2011), University of Hertfordshire
The Construction of Personal Identities Online

Presentation of the project

Workshop - Who am I Online?
10-11 May 2010, University of Aarhus, Kaløvig Centre, Denmark
Call For Papers (deadline: 31 March 2010)

Workshop - Personal Identities Online and Information Ethics
21-22 May 2010, Department of Philosophy, Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey

Workshop - Personal Identites, their Embodiments and Environments
2 July, 2010, University of Hertfordshire, UK
Keynote Speakers: Professor Eric Olson (Sheffield) and Professor Galen Strawson (Reading)
Call for papers  (deadline: 15 April 2010)

Panel session: Personal Identity Online: A Philosophical Interpretation
Identity in the Information Society, Third Workshop
26-28 May, 2010, Hotel Victoria, Rome, Italy

Special Issue of Minds and Machines

The AHRC requests that

"Acknowledgement of support from the AHRC accompanied by the AHRC logo must be included in any publications, publicity or marketing material – including printed material such as books, exhibition guides, press releases or electronic communications such as a website. In the case of broadcast coverage (radio or television) of research that AHRC has funded, acknowledgement should also be given where possible."

and that the following description should be made available:

“Each year the AHRC provides funding from the Government to support research and postgraduate study in the arts and humanities, from archaeology and English literature to design and dance. Only applications of the highest quality and excellence are funded and the range of research supported by this investment of public funds not only provides social and cultural benefits but also contributes to the economic success of the UK. For further information on the AHRC, please see our website www.ahrc.ac.uk ”