DOI: 10.1145/1378727.1378728
Wendy Hall

acm’s Place in the Global Picture

ACM’s new president intends to make

international initiatives a top priority,

hoping to share the Association’s riches

with a greater global audience.

It is a tremendous honor to have been

elected ACM President. My history with

this Association goes back many years

and in that time I’ve witnessed great ad-

vances in our profession and continue

to be impressed by ACM’s leadership

role in responding to those changes

with premier publications, conferenc-

es, curricula models, and professional

services that reflect emerging comput-

ing research.

I recall my first ACM invitation

to join its Publications Board, never

imagining my acceptance of that in-

vitation would one day lead to my be-

coming President. Back then I looked

forward to those board meetings not

only for the impact we were making

in bringing great new journals to the

computing field but for the chance to

visit ACM headquarters in New York,

one of my favorite cities. But that was

over 20 years ago, when you still had to

walk to the library to find your favorite

journal and attending conferences or

buying conference proceedings was

the most effective way to keep up with

your area of expertise. In fact, two of

the major attractions for me becoming

an ACM member was the value such

membership gave a computer science

researcher at that time—a more eco-

nomical means for subscribing to top

journals and attending professional

conferences.

Today we live in a post-Web world

where almost everything we want to

read is available online as soon as it is

published. Indeed, the ups and downs

of the major world economies have af-

fected many of us to the point where

traveling to our favorite conferences

is sometimes viewed as a luxury rather

than a basic necessity.

With all its publications available

through the Digital Library and an in-

creasing number of conferences be-

ing held outside the U.S., the location

of ACM’s headquarters is no longer

viewed by its physical address. ACM is

everywhere its members are; and that

location continues to expand globally.

ACM membership numbers are in fact

steadily increasing. It is my ambition

while I am President to ensure this

trend continues and to set in motion

initiatives to accelerate it and to in-

crease the diversity of membership in

the widest sense.

There is work to be done. It remains

a frustration that many people from

outside the U.S. think the ‘A’ in ACM

stands for American. Our goal must be

to find ways to spread the word about

ACM and to illustrate how our vast ar-

ray of valued resources and profes-

sional services have relevance to every

computing professional, regardless of

location.

Certainly the recent revitalization of

Communications is a crucial element in

the process of increasing our interna-

tional presence and expanding the ser-

vice we provide to all of our communi-

ties. We are also continuing to develop

our services to the practitioner com-

munity by making ACM Queue available

online as part of a new Queue Web site,

which will include many features and

content channels specifically targeted

to practitioners. You will also find in

Communications a new “Practice” sec-

tion that covers the issues and technol-

ogy trends facing today’s practitioners.

We plan to develop further our ini-

tiatives in India and China, explore our

relationship with Europe, and examine

how to position our services and pub-

lications to be more relevant in South

America and other parts of the world.

We also intend to give a higher profile

to ACM-W in order to make the Asso-

ciation more pertinent to the women

in our community and to encourage

more women to consider careers in

computing.

I look forward to a very exciting and

fruitful two years as President and hope

to meet as many of you as possible at

various ACM events and conferences

during that time. Every ACM President

wants to make a difference, and as its

first non-North American President I

hope when I look back on my term in

office I will be able to see demonstrable

evidence that the ACM has increased its

relevance and attractiveness as a mem-

bership organization to the worldwide

computing community.

Wendy hall ( wh@ecs.soton.ac.uk) is president of the ACM and a professor of computer science at the University of Southampton, U. K.

References:

mailto:wh@ecs.soton.ac.uk

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