SEFI ethics seminar: Justice and community engagement in engineering education

  • Diana Adela Martin (Organiser)
  • Khalid Kadir (Contributor)
  • Patricia Xavier (Contributor)
  • Jason Borenstein (Contributor)
  • Cristiano Cordeiro Cruz (Contributor)
  • Sarah Junaid (Chair)

Activity: Participating in or organising an event typesWorkshop, seminar, course or exhibitionScientific

Description

Recent years witnessed an increase in the calls for engineers to address inequality and injustice which is both a part and an outcome of current models of technological design and engineering practice. What was first a movement towards social justice initiated during the Vietnam War era when engineers founded the Committee for Social Responsibility in Engineering, it is now a topic whose importance is rapidly expanding in the conscience of educators. The responsibility to prepare a new generation of engineers that would strive for change and be ready to work towards societal goals in a manner that promotes equality and fairness lies with universities. Our seminar brings four experts from the US, the UK, and Brazil to explore ways in which justice and community engagement can be incorporated into the education of engineers, while also reflecting on the implications and limitations of such an approach.

Khalid Kadir (UC Berkeley, the US) Ethics Is Not Enough: Justice as the Ends and Means of Engineering Education
Patricia Xavier, Gabrielle Orbaek White, Nathalie Al-Kakoun (Swansea University, the UK) Finding spaces for humility and different perspectives in engineering community engagement
Jason Borenstein (Georgia Institute of technology, the US) Community Engagement and Undergraduate Social Responsibility Attitudes
Cristiano Cordeiro Cruz (Aeronautics Technological Institute, Brazil) Supporting community emancipation and learning how to practice “another possible” engineering: the Brazilian Grassroots Engineering case
Period15 Jul 2021
Event typeSeminar
Degree of RecognitionInternational

Keywords

  • engineering ethics
  • engineering ethics education
  • social justice