| |
| Overview |
We
invite you to present your innovative research
related to rural financial access!
This
is an opportunity for researchers
and practitioners to
share your work with leading academics and
funders in the field.
Top 5 poster authors will receive full scholarships
to the conference and some authors will have
the chance to publish their work in
Savings & Development Journal
Call
for Poster Submissions
Deadline to apply: July 15th, 2008
OVERVIEW
Over
the past several years, there has been increasing
interest in access to financial services as
a means for addressing poverty in the developing
world. The primary purpose of this inaugural
conference is to shorten the cycle between ideas,
research, and the practical application of policies
designed to expand the delivery of financial
services to poor people.This conference will
focus on the challenges of expanding the frontier
of rural finance, and sits at the nexus between
rigorous academic research and the application
of this research in policy decisions and field
operations.
POSTER
SESSIONS
Participation as a poster presenter offers a
unique opportunity for networking with people
in the field and receiving feedback from top
academics, policy makers, and practitioners
in relation to the practical application of
research results. Posters will be selected by
a committee of academics to be displayed during
the conference and presented during 2 poster
sessions. The posters will be presented on site,
where researchers can offer overviews of current
areas of practice, and practitioners and policy
makers can offer suggestions and input. Posters
are being solicited in areas relevant to rural
finance including but not limited to:
-
Nexus between rural and agricultural finance
-
Impact of interest rates and transaction costs
on low income clients
-
Price sensitivity on the demand for microcredit
and micro deposit facilities
-
Reach of electronic payments systems into
poor areas
-
Appropriate regulatory frameworks for rural
finance in small distant markets
-
Value added of formal finance to the poor
– right products, low cost delivery
channels
-
Impact of increased access to finance on macroeconomic
development
-
Innovations in risk reduction
-
Value chains as a source of financial services
REFEREED
POSTER SUBMISSIONS
Posters
should be carefully designed to visually convey
the details of the research. The posters
should attract the attention of people that
are attending the conference so that they will
be drawn to look at them during the breaks.
The goal is to develop a poster that brings
people who are interested in your research topic
together and generates active discussion of
the research.The posters will be reviewed and
selected by the Poster Committee. Twenty
posters will be displayed and presented during
the 2 poster sessions. The top five poster
authors will receive a scholarship to attend
the conference and special recognition at the
conference. A submission must include
an abstract not exceeding 400 words and a mock
up of the poster (in pdf or power point format).
Also, please include the URL of a web site related
to the poster if applicable.
Authors of selected submissions must submit
a paper to be published on the event website
prior to the event. This will allow your
work to be shared with a much larger audience.
By agreeing to present your poster at the Boulder-Bergamo
Forum on Access to Financial Services,
you are agreeing to publish your work on these
websites.
PRACTICAL
-
One
author per accepted poster can attend the
conference, exhibition and social event
free of charge, excluding travel and lodging
expenses.
-
The
posters will be located in a public area,
close to the exhibition, viewable for all
conference attendees.
-
The
size of the board for the poster is about
1 meter wide and 1.5 meter high. SEE
GUIDELINES
-
The
posters are to be set up Wednesday evening,
September 17th.
-
During
coffee breaks someone must be present at
the poster to interact with conference attendees.
At other times this is also possible, putting
a time schedule on the poster is recommended.
-
Selected
authors must bring with them CDs, leaflets
and whatever they regard advisable to be
distributed to the conference participants.
IMPORTANT
DATES
Submission of abstract and poster mock up due: July 15th, 2008
Notification to authors: July 30th, 2008
Paper Due: August 22nd, 2008
CONFERENCE
ORGANIZERS
Poster
Committee: email contact
Someone from poster committee(chair)
Prof. Laura Viganò – University
of Bergamo
Prof. Sousan Urroz-Korori – University
of Colorado, Boulder
Prof. Richard L. Meyer – The Ohio State
University
Prof. Claudio Gonzalez-Vega – The Ohio
State University
Dr. J.D. Von Pischke – Frontier Finance
International
Event
Coordination: shawn@bouldermft.org
Shawn Hernandez, Boulder Institute of Microfinance
Back
to Top
|
| Guidelines |
Format:
-
Measurement: The poster should measure
approx. 1 meter wide by 1.5 meter high.
-
Heading: The letters in the heading
should measure at least 2.5 centimeters high,
and should list the title of the paper, authors,
institution and its location.
-
Lettering: The letters must be easy
to read at 1.5 meters distance from the poster.
For handwritten posters, the text should be
clear and legible.
Organization
& Content:
-
The poster should follow a logical sequence
including:
-
statement of the problem
-
objectives of the research
-
methodology used to solve the problem
-
major findings and outcomes
-
significance and conclusions
-
Specifically, the poster should:
-
Clearly and concisely state the objectives,
questions, and hypothesis of the research
-
Include empirical data
-
Briefly outline methods used and provide
references
-
Present results in graphs or tables with
clear legends and preferably an interpretation
of the results below.
-
State conclusions and major findings in
large and clear type for viewers to see.
Helpful
Hints for Posters
-
Make sure the poster is easy to follow and
that any visual can “stand alone”.
People will be viewing your poster when
you are not there. (ie. graph axes are properly
labeled, symbols are explained, etc.)
-
Make it obvious to the viewer how to progressively
view the poster. The poster generally should
read from left to right, and top to bottom.
Numbering the individual panels or connecting
them with arrows is a standard "guidance
system".
-
Present numerical data in the form of graphs,
rather than tables (graphs make trends in
the data much more evident). If data must
be presented in table-form, KEEP IT SIMPLE.
-
Make sure that the text and the visuals
are integrated. Figures should be numbered
consecutively according to the order in
which they are first mentioned in the text.
Each visual should have a brief title (for
example: Figure 1- Location of study area).
-
Concentrate on 2-3 main points. Don't try
to cover too many things. Present only enough
data to support your conclusions. On the
other hand, make sure that you present sufficient
data to support your conclusions.
-
Simplicity is key! Avoid using too much
text. Use bullets as opposed to full sentences.
Limit the text to about one-fourth of the
poster space, and use "visuals"
(graphs, photographs, schematics, maps,
etc.) to tell your "story."
• Leave some open space in the design.
An open layout is less tiring to the eye
and mind. Use color to enhance comprehension,
not to decorate the poster.
Additional
Resources
http://www.ncsu.edu/project/posters/NewSite/
- Creating Effective Poster Presentations by
George Hess, Kathryn Tosney, Leon Liegel
http://www.aapg.org/meetings/instructions/prepguide.pdf
- The Poster Session: A Guide for Preparation
by Carol Waite Connor, US Geological Survey
http://www.owlnet.rice.edu/~cainproj/designing.html
- Poster Design Guide by the Cain Project at
Rice University.
http://www.plu.edu/%7Elibr/workshops/multimedia/posters.html
- Creating Poster Sessions by Pacific Lutheran
University
Back
to Top
|
|
|
|