Engineering, poverty, and the earth G. D. Catalano, “Engineering, poverty, and the earth”, Synthesis Lectures on Engineers, Technology, and Society, vol. 4, no. Compendex, pp. 1-83, 2007. Read more about Engineering, poverty, and the earthLog in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS
Designs on development: engineering, globalization, and social justice D. Nieusma and Riley, D., “Designs on development: engineering, globalization, and social justice”, Engineering Studies , vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 29-59, 2010. Read more about Designs on development: engineering, globalization, and social justiceLog in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarDOIBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS
Engineers Engaging Community: Water and Energy C. Oldham, Crebbin, G., Dobbs, S., and Gaynor, A., “Engineers Engaging Community: Water and Energy”, Synthesis Lectures on Engineers, Technology and Society, vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 1 - 116, 2013. Read more about Engineers Engaging Community: Water and EnergyLog in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarDOIBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS
Engineering and Sustainable Community Development J. Lucena, Schneider, J., and Leydens, J. A., “Engineering and Sustainable Community Development”, Synthesis Lectures on Engineers, Technology and Society, vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 1 - 230, 2010. Read more about Engineering and Sustainable Community DevelopmentLog in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarDOIBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS
Designs on development: engineering, globalization, and social justice D. Nieusma and Riley, D., “Designs on development: engineering, globalization, and social justice”, Engineering Studies, vol. 2, pp. 29-59, 2010. Read more about Designs on development: engineering, globalization, and social justiceLog in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarDOIBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS
Engineering and the value of social justice J. Schneider, “Engineering and the value of social justice ”, Engineering Studies , vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 1-4, 2010. Read more about Engineering and the value of social justice Log in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarDOIBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS
Engineering and the values of social justice J. Schneider, “Engineering and the values of social justice”, Engineering Studies, vol. 2, pp. 1-4, 2010. Read more about Engineering and the values of social justiceLog in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarDOIBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS
Seeing through the lens of social justice: a threshold for engineering J. Kabo and Baillie, C., “Seeing through the lens of social justice: a threshold for engineering”, European Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 34, no. 4, pp. 317-325, 2009. Read more about Seeing through the lens of social justice: a threshold for engineeringLog in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarDOIBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS
Capabilities and radicalism: Engineering accessibility in the 21st century N. Tyler, “Capabilities and radicalism: Engineering accessibility in the 21st century”, Transportation Planning and Technology, vol. 29, no. Compendex, pp. 331-358, 2006. Read more about Capabilities and radicalism: Engineering accessibility in the 21st centuryLog in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarDOIBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS
Ambiguous reform: technical workforce planning and ideologies of class and race in 1960s Chicago A. Slaton, “Ambiguous reform: technical workforce planning and ideologies of class and race in 1960s Chicago”, Engineering Studies , vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 5-28, Submitted. Read more about Ambiguous reform: technical workforce planning and ideologies of class and race in 1960s ChicagoLog in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarDOIBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS
Engineering and social inequalities in modern world literature: of disembodied forces and provocative intrusions J. D. Straker, “Engineering and social inequalities in modern world literature: of disembodied forces and provocative intrusions”, Engineering Studies, vol. 2, pp. 61-83, 2010. Read more about Engineering and social inequalities in modern world literature: of disembodied forces and provocative intrusionsLog in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS
Needs and Feasibility: A Guide for Engineers in Community Projects --- The Case of Waste for Life C. Baillie, Feinblatt, E., Thamae, T., and Berrington, E., “Needs and Feasibility: A Guide for Engineers in Community Projects --- The Case of Waste for Life”, Synthesis Lectures on Engineers, Technology and Society, vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 1 - 135, 2010. Read more about Needs and Feasibility: A Guide for Engineers in Community Projects --- The Case of Waste for LifeLog in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarDOIBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS
Treating Water: Engineering and the Denial of Indigenous Water Rights T. Hinidan, “Treating Water: Engineering and the Denial of Indigenous Water Rights”, International Journal of Engineering, Social Justice, and Peace, vol. 4, 2015. Read more about Treating Water: Engineering and the Denial of Indigenous Water RightsLog in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS
The dialectic between expert knowledge and professional discretion: accreditation, social control and the limits of instrumental logic C. Seron and Silbey, S. S., “The dialectic between expert knowledge and professional discretion: accreditation, social control and the limits of instrumental logic”, Engineering Studies, vol. 1, pp. 101-127, 2009. Read more about The dialectic between expert knowledge and professional discretion: accreditation, social control and the limits of instrumental logicLog in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarDOIBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS
A Different Trolley Problem: The Limits of Environmental Justice and the Promise of Complex Moral Assessments for Transportation Infrastructure S. Epting, “A Different Trolley Problem: The Limits of Environmental Justice and the Promise of Complex Moral Assessments for Transportation Infrastructure”, Science & Engineering Ethics, vol. 22, no. 6, pp. 1781-1795, 2016. Read more about A Different Trolley Problem: The Limits of Environmental Justice and the Promise of Complex Moral Assessments for Transportation InfrastructureLog in or register to post commentsGoogle ScholarDOIBibTeXTaggedMARCEndNote XMLRIS