To India

Tomorrow (soon today) its off to India! Its work but totally amazing to be able to travel to India for work. My only wish is that I would be able to spend more time traveling around the country but I have to get back to my teaching. OK, so I like teaching but it would have been nice to see more of the country. As it is I am really happy to be going to Mumbai and to spend time there.

Databases and international protest

At an informal meeting of European Union ministers of justice and ministers of the interior Wolfgang Schäuble proposed

…that the Prüm Treaty be transposed into the legal framework of the EU. The treaty, which was signed by Belgium, Germany, France, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Austria and Spain in the town of Prüm in Germany in March 2006 provides for enhanced cross-border cooperation of the police and judicial authorities, especially with regard to combating terrorism, cross-border crime and illegal migration. The purpose of the treaty is not only to facilitate prosecution, but also to aid the crime prevention efforts of the authorities. (Heise Online – I added the bold)

So what? It sounds good, almost boring.

The whole point of this is to create a network of national databases and increase the exchange of information. Those who sign the treaty will give each other access to their DNA and fingerprint data.

Pointing to this “added value provided by the treaty” Mr. Schäuble spoke out in favor of adopting the system throughout Europe: “Our aim is to create a modern police information network for more effective crime control throughout Europe,” he said. Apart from allowing for cross-border police raids and patrols the treaty permits “the authorities to exchange information on traveling violent offenders, such as hooligans, in the context of major events (for example football matches, European Council meetings or other international summits) in order to prevent criminal acts.” (Heise Online – I added the bold)

So even though the database is originally for the prevention of “combating terrorism, cross-border crime and illegal migration” the database will also be used in preventing protesters in traveling to other countries. This is particularly interesting since the political level is now supra-national but the protesters will not be allowed to be.

What is a train station?

What a silly question really! What is a train station? But at the same time the purpose of the station has become different to the one which was intended. The vogue for some time now is that places should be exciting meeting places instead of functional and streamlined.

Therefore to enable this the main hall of the Stockholm train station was turned into a tennis court a few weeks ago. On several occasions the stations at both Stockholm and Göteborg have been turned into virtual conference and exhibition halls. On other times the stations have been used by talk show hosts and as locations for fashion shows.
Yesterday in Stockholm there was a decorative piece intended to signify that the station was more than a station. It was a floating dinner table.

The problem with all this is that the events occur at the expense of function. I don’t want to be met, challenged, entertained, amused, educated, dined or sold – I just want to catch a train! In their haste to renew themselves the train station is forgetting that it is basically a function to facilitate mass transportation.

Travel Tales

Don’t get me wrong. It is a privilege and an adventure to be able to travel. But it is also – occasionally – a real pain. Things like lost bags, missed connections, annoying people, sad food etc have a tendency to bring even the most positive of travelers down. My trip to Belgium has been an easy and comfortable one for me but all around me there were less happy people.

It began early when disembarking I noticed a bag which had been dropped

Someone’s toothbrush will not be following them home. Despite this my bag was not lost so I moved happily along. The hotel was nice, friendly and clean but the wifi was a bit too flakey so most of the time I either had difficulties or was unable to go online.

Travel has been made even more annoying with the new rules at the security check. Actually it is not too difficult but strangely enough too many people have not yet understood that if they do not attempt to have metal items on them – it makes you wonder whether people enjoy being fondled by security.

Just after the security I saw this wonderful sign in a window. What do you think? Is it a recruitment campaign or simply a way of adding insult to the security insult of not being able to carry liquids?

I think its Belgian humor…

University building

The university in Namur is a large concrete building in the middle of town. Despite the building material it is not a very ugly building â?? in fact its bare concrete finish (inside and out) has a very retro feel to it. Usually I do not have any such feelings towards concrete.

The meeting room was at the dept. of informatics in the Alan Turing room â?? I do like when peoples names are used for rooms, even if this could be considered a dubious honor. Alan Turing is a bright room with a high ceiling, blue carpet and windows on three walls. No big surprise here. What is more than a bit unusual are three rings mounted in the ceiling intended for climbing…

Apparently the rings are not used by abseiling computer scientists (as I had hoped) but are rather there to be used by the window cleaners. Once again reality spoils a really good theory.

Namur

Oh no – it’s a grey rainy day in Namur so not really a flattering for the city but it looks like a very nice town with lots of small cobbled streets.

The first analysis of Belgium is that there are plenty of bars, not many cafés, people seem to ignore umbrellas but like dogs (too many pitbulls). The good news is that the hotel has wifi.

Hectic Travel Plans

There seemed to be so much time when I agreed to everything. But now the busy season is upon me and wow there really is no time left at all. So the next few weeks are going to be incredibly intense and interesting. tomorrow I have to finish most of the planning for my teaching workload this term. On Thursday I am going to be on my way to the IFIP 9.2 & SIG 9.2.2 working group meetings in Namur Belgium.

Back on Sunday for a few days work before spending the day in Stockholm in meetings and organizing my Indian visa. On Thursday I am examiner on a couple of masters thesis’ and then it’s off to Linköping for a presentation. Friday & Monday work as usual Tuesday guest lecture (here in Göteborg) and then on Wednesday it’s off to India! Too cool. I will be in India for almost two weeks of meetings and a conference (and a bit of sight-seeing).

Hectic, but really exciting. I just have the nagging feeling that I have forgotten something important…

The Mountain Lake

Yesterday I held a public lecture in a local suburb of Göteborg, a place called the Mountain Lake. In English the name is totally exotic and idyllic. In Swedish the place is called Bergsjön (literally the mountain lake). Bergsjön is not a place with idyllic connotations but rather one thinks of a problem suburb to the northeast of Göteborg.

Built in the 1960s. Bergsjön is actually a part of Göteborg which lies close to nature, with parks, and yes, a lake. The area is 8 km outside the city center with good public transportation. Almost all the street names have something to do with outer space (for example Galileo Street and Comet Road). At the same time the area is also described as a failing area marked by social segregation, high unemployment and a large (yet diverse) immigrant population.

Bergsjön came to be built during the so-called million program which is the common name for the large scale housing project intended to solve the housing crisis of the 1950s and 1960s in Sweden. The goal was to build one million apartments in Sweden during 1965-1974. It is worth remembering that the population of Sweden is today 9 million.

The architectural ideal of the day was strongly focused on a few key ideas such as commuting, intense central planning, functionalism and a return to nature (or rather a desire to leave the narrow confines of the small stone cities). These ideas, coupled with narrow economic margins, formed the way in which these satellite cities were designed, built and populated. Today one fourth of the population of Sweden lives in a house built in this program. Despite the ideals and economic constraints, in the end, only one fourth of the houses of the million project have more than six floors.

Bergsjön

Many of the complaints against the projects do not concern themselves with the standard of living or the building materials and techniques used. The problem has been seen as a social problem. By building large-scale projects also involves the movement of people. These people have little or no common background connected with the place. Therefore social cohesion becomes difficult from the start.

In addition to this these spaces have been populated with a high number of new immigrants in addition to people with social problems. Thus the areas have been marked with high unemployment. This leads to high social costs and low council taxes which creates a negative spiral.

Social cohesion is on the rise. The first â??officialâ?? notice of this development came from linguists who began to notice a common language being formed and developed in these areas. The language is marked with a high level of borrowed terms from many different parts of the world. Once this minor dialect became more popular it also brought with it a growing awareness of the cultural developments within these areas.

Despite this there remain serious issues connected to the buildings of the million program. Mikael Askergren suggests that they should not be seen as social living spaces but rather:

â??Why do people have such problems loving the concrete architecture of Sweden’s structuralist residential suburbs of the 1960s and 1970s? Most people seem to agree that it is impossible to live a decent life there. But it should be possible to learn to love the architecture of these suburbs as monumentalist artworks; as sculpture. The future of the suburbs of the 1960s and 1970s is not to be lived in, but (much like the castles, palaces, and other monumentalist artworks of ancient times) to be emptied, to be restored to their original splendour, and then to become the subject of tourism.â?? â??Concrete Tourismâ?? by Mikael Askergren, Plaza Magazine, 5-2002.

Whatever happens these areas constitute the real fringe of Swedish language and cultural development. Away from the mainstream they may be the place from where new culture may be introduced into the mainstream.

However, none of this will solve the social issues connected with the larges sites of the million program. Politicians have largely ignored the topic of social improvement since they naively believe that reducing unemployment through different schemes (carrots and/or sticks) will even fix problems of social seclusion and segregation.

Umbrella City

Today I have been lecturing at the Swedish School of Library and Information Science at the University College of BorÃ¥s. The course is called Theories of the Information Society and Information Policy and my lecture was on Information Politics. So basically I got to talk about my own subject for three hours. So cool. I just love guest lecturing…

When arriving at the station in BorÃ¥s I was informed that the kiosk at the station has a umbrella leasing system. Basically you can lease an umbrella for the day. You pay 60 kr and if you return the umbrella at the end of the day you get 40 kr back. What a totally impressive system. I have never seen this in Göteborg or in England (two places famous for their rain). It’s nice to see a city taking its climate seriously.

All I need now is to find a place that rents out bowler hats…
(image from here)

Military Hotels

Right now I am in Stockholm for a project together with the Swedish military academy. They booked me into a hotel called Tapto so I was expecting a slightly military slant to the hotel and I was not disappointed. Outside the hotel was a military man in uniform waiting for a taxi, or a tank but I doubt that… since I think he was navy.

In the hallways there were military prints – still not surprising. I was a bit surprised by the glass cases with dummies dressed in military uniforms (old and new). A bit unusual for a hotel.

The best bit was when I got into the room. Instead of the traditional bible on the bedside table what do you think I found? It was Alistair Maclean’s “Puppet on a String”…

Obviously the new testament is not action-packed enough.