Volume 8, Issue 4 (December 2023)                   J Environ Health Sustain Dev 2023, 8(4): 2100-2101 | Back to browse issues page


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Louis Dreisbach J, Mendoza-Dreisbach S. Exploring the Potential Contributions of Virtual Academic Conferences in Global and Environmental Public Health. J Environ Health Sustain Dev 2023; 8 (4) :2100-2101
URL: http://jehsd.ssu.ac.ir/article-1-658-en.html
Department of Filipino, De La Salle University, Manila, Philippines.
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Exploring the Potential Contributions of Virtual Academic Conferences in Global and Environmental Public Health

Jeconiah Louis Dreisbach 1*, Sharon Mendoza-Dreisbach 2

1 Department of Filipino, De La Salle University, Manila, Philippines.
2 School of Business, Skyline University College, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates.
A R T I C L E  I N F O
LETTER TO EDITOR
*Corresponding Author:
Jeconiah Louis Dreisbach
Email:
jeconiah.dreisbach@dlsu.edu.ph
Tel:
+63 923 4134397

Article History:
Received: 26 September 2023
Accepted: 20 November  2023
Citation: Dreisbach JL, Mendoza-Dreisbach S. Exploring the Potential Contributions of Virtual Academic Conferences in Global and Environmental Public Health. J Environ Health Sustain Dev. 2023; 8(4): 2100-1.

To the Editor,
As countries gradually enter the post-COVID 19 era with the removal of pandemic time restrictions, international research conferences are returning to full in-person operations as well. These global academic conventions are commonly attended by thousands of participants from various parts of the world, with each individual delegate possibly travelling more thousands of miles taking intercontinental flights 1. For example, the centralized 2019 ASTMH conference resulted to 8,646 metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions from travel of 4,832 participants 2. This contributes to poor air quality that worsens environmental public health 3.
Considering that there are hundreds of academic organizations holding academic conferences with the relatively same number of participants annually, global academia’s contribution to the worsening situation of climate change and global public health should be a matter of grave concern. Authors of the previously cited work on the ASTMH conference proposed a decentralization of the conference in major international travel hubs per continent (Washington DC, Lima, Amsterdam, Nairobi, and Bangkok) to reduce the travelling distance of participants, which will also result to a 58% reduction in carbon dioxide emissions.
A study conducted by researchers from the University of Bristol reported that in the two-day virtual conference which had attendees from across the globe, only 20 kilograms of carbon dioxide was emitted from the use of essential information technology equipment. This is a stark difference compared to 1,130 kilograms emitted by one passenger who is travelling from New York to London to participate in an international conference 4.
Although the decentralization proposal could indeed result in the significant decrease in gas emissions affecting climate change, this does not resolve the issue of cultural and social equity which is essential in decolonizing global discourses. It is possible that the academic gatekeeping of the Global North will continue to persist in dialogues that require diverse and inclusive perspectives.
Therefore, it is imperative for international academic organizations to hold virtual and hybrid research conferences to resolve the matter of contention mentioned. A recent study has shown that online academic conferences during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in a substantial increase in equity, inclusivity, and environmental sustainability 5. For academics and researchers from the Global South, in addition to travelling longer distances compared to their counterparts in the Global North, they experience the personal burden of applying for visas that require them to provide proof of financial capacity for their planned travels. This factor alone is a major obstacle in the decolonization of global discourses.
There are several challenges in achieving this proposition. First, audience engagement is limited in virtual and hybrid academic conferences due to the physical limitations of online platforms in ensuring the presence of panel participants. It is possible that participants are multitasking while the discussant is presenting their paper. In recorded presentations, there are cases in which some paper presenters fail to answer questions from audiences 6. Professional networking and social interactions needed to establish international linkages are almost non-existent in virtual academic conference programs 7.
To counter the mentioned drawbacks, virtual conference organizers must provide guidelines and protocols ensuring that online live and recorded paper presenters will give feedback regarding inquiries about their work. There are also platforms such as Gather Town and Kumospace where organizers can design open online areas where people can virtually gather and socialize to establish professional networks.
It is established in existing global and environmental health literature that virtual academic conferences enable sustainable practices in academic discourses. It is due to the fact that it substantially decreases the carbon footprint of global academic activities, mitigates the effects of climate change, ensures the inclusivity of participants from the Global South, and addresses the issue of equity in academic dialogues. It is a decolonizing intervention to the domination of the Global North in the global academic discourses.
Abbreviations
COVID-19: 2019 Coronavirus Disease
ASTMH: American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Washington DC: Washington District of Columbia (United States of America)

This is an Open-Access article distributed in accordance with the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon this work for commercial use.

References
1. Jäckle S. The carbon footprint of travelling to international academic conferences and options to minimise it. In: Bjørkdahl K, Franco Duharte AS, eds. Academic Flying and the Means of Communication. Palgrave Macmillan. 2022:19-52.
2. Bousema T, Selvaraj P, Djimbde AA, et al. Reducing the carbon footprint of academic conferences: the example of the american society of tropical medicine and hygiene. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2020;103(5):1758-61.
3. Turner A, Webb A, Jago R, et al. Integrated working in local authority decision-making about air quality: a qualitative study in Southwest England. J Public Health. 2023; 45(3):654-62.
4. Grove J. Carbon footprint of virtual academic conferences revealed. Available from:https:// www.timeshighereducation.com/news/carbon-footprint-virtual-academic-conferences-revealed [Cited 12 April 2023].
5. Skiles M, Yang E, Reshef O, et al. Conference demographics and footprint changed by virtual platforms. Nat Sustain. 2021;5:149-56.
6. Guetter CR, Altieri MS, Henry MCW, et al. In-person vs. virtual conferences: Lessons learned and how to take advantage of the best of both worlds. Am J Surg. 2022; 224(5):1334-6.
7. Kim KJ, Kim SR, Lee J, et al. Virtual conference participant’s perceptions of its effectiveness
and future projections. BMC Med Educ. 2022; 22:10.

 
Type of Study: Letters to editor | Subject: General
Received: 2023/09/26 | Accepted: 2023/11/20 | Published: 2023/12/24

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