Aakhus, M.  (May, 1999).  Process management: The proverbs of practice in constructing contexts for ‘real communication.’ Presented at the International Communication Association Annual Convention, San Francisco, CA. 

Aakhus, M.  (May, 1999).  “Buy-In” practices: Some consequences of managing organizational decision-making with collaboration technology. Presented at the International Communication Association  Annual Convention, San Francisco, CA.   

Aakhus, M.  (May, 1999). Reconstruction games: Assessing the communicative knowledge in collaborative computing products. Presented at the International Communication Association Annual  Convention, San Francisco, CA. 

Aakhus, M. (November, 1999). Technology design and communication professionals. Presented at the  National Communication Association Annual Convention, Chicago, IL. 

Aakhus, M. (February, 2000). Mediated interaction: Designing formats for political interaction. Presented at the  School of Communication, Information, and Library Studies conference on Media, Information, and  Politics: Research issues for the new millennium, New Brunswick, NJ.   

Aakhus, M. (April, 2000). The architecture of the classroom of the future: Educating the communication professional. Presented at the Eastern Communication Association Annual Convention, Pittsburgh, PA. 

Aakhus, M. (June, 2000). Human communication and technology: Counter-acting the “conduit” logic in the  design of mediated interaction. Presented at the National Communication Association’s International  Conference on Rhetoric and Communication in the 21st Century, Jyväskyä, Finland. 

Aakhus, M. (November, 2000). Virtual dialectics: Support for critical reflection in online, experience-based learning communities. Presented at the National Communication Association Annual Convention,  Seattle, WA. 

Aakhus, M. (November, 2000). Activity in mediated communication. Presented at the National Communication  Association Annual Convention, Seattle, WA.  

Aakhus, M. (November, 2000). Info-mediaries and the privatization of the public sphere. Presented at the National Communication Association Annual Convention, Seattle, PA.  

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