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International Journal of Engineering, Social Justice, and Peace
Number of Followers: 5  

  This is an Open Access Journal Open Access journal
ISSN (Print) 1927-9434 - ISSN (Online) 1927-9434
Published by Engineering, Social Justice, and Peace - ESJP Homepage  [1 journal]
  • Cover for the International Journal of Engineering Social Justice and
           Peace, Volume 9, Issue 1: Hibrid Praxis

    • Authors: Bibiana Serpa
      PubDate: 2022-06-18
      DOI: 10.24908/ijesjp.v9i1.15704
      Issue No: Vol. 9, No. 1 (2022)
       
  • Editorial Volume 9, Number 1: Hybrid Praxis

    • Authors: Claudia Grisales Bohorquez, Leonardo León
      Pages: 1 - 4
      PubDate: 2022-06-23
      DOI: 10.24908/ijesjp.v9i1.15705
      Issue No: Vol. 9, No. 1 (2022)
       
  • The Journey of Engineering in the Construction of Peace and Social Justice

    • Authors: Alexei Ochoa Duarte, Andrés Acero
      Pages: 5 - 14
      Abstract: Since 2005, and thanks to the impulse of an interdisciplinary team of experts, academics, researchers, activists, engineers or related to it, the International Conference on Engineering, Social Justice and Peace arises in the search for alternative approaches to do, live and educate in engineering.
      In this evolution of calendars and geography, there had been fourteen meetings of the Engineering, Social Justice and Peace network, and number 15 was destined to be exceptional. Unintentionally, the fifteenth meeting had very different circumstances from the previous ones, not due to the capacity of convocation, or to the growing interest in working for an engineering committed to nature, society and human beings, but because of a historical situation that has made us rethink what we had taken for granted until some time ago. This event has been in the making since 2019, under the premise of being held in 2020. With several initiatives of the event itself, there was a work team, the approval of several papers, workshops and activities, a tentative schedule and the approach of the recognition "Technology for Social Justice".
      However, nature gave a warning cry to the human being and the coronavirus appeared on the scene causing a great amount of transformations worldwide. Therefore, the event was postponed until 2021, and adjusted to the virtuality that has been with us since the pandemic health emergency arose. In this context, adjustments were made to the composition of the team and the responsibilities assumed by its members. However, despite the difficulties posed by this new scenario, the commitment to social transformation marked the way forward for the conference.
      After arduous meetings and tasks, between June 10 and 12, 2021, the XV International Conference on Engineering, Social Justice and Peace, sees the light, and with it promises to transform society from a diversity of ways of doing and living. This paper seeks to systematize the experience of the organizing team of the conference, so that the successes and mistakes they had during the process, are transformed into useful lessons for the transformation of engineering towards one that is committed to the communities.
      PubDate: 2022-06-18
      DOI: 10.24908/ijesjp.v9i1.15573
      Issue No: Vol. 9, No. 1 (2022)
       
  • Suspendido entre la selva, la etnografía, el documental y la
           ingeniería

    • Authors: Nicolás Gaitán-Albarracín, Nayher Andrés Clavijo, Juan David Reina-Rozo
      Pages: 15 - 29
      Abstract: Simón Uribe es profesor e investigador adscrito a la Facultad de Ciencias Políticas de la Universidad del Rosario en Bogotá. Estudió ciencias políticas en la Universidad Nacional de Colombia y es Doctor en geografía humana de la Escuela de Economía y Ciencias Políticas de Londres (LSE). Paralelamente a su carrera académica, ha dirigido dos cortos: Trampolín de la muerte (2014) y La guerra de los Cárdenas y los Valdeblánquez (2006). Suspensión es su primer largo documental.
      PubDate: 2022-06-18
      DOI: 10.24908/ijesjp.v9i1.15700
      Issue No: Vol. 9, No. 1 (2022)
       
  • Networks of Power. Electrification of Western Society, 1880-1930 (Review)

    • Authors: Antonio Mejia Umaña
      Pages: 30 - 39
      PubDate: 2022-06-18
      DOI: 10.24908/ijesjp.v9i1.15692
      Issue No: Vol. 9, No. 1 (2022)
       
  • Engenharia e outras práticas técnicas engajadas - volume 2: Iniciativas
           de formação profissional (Book Review)

    • Authors: Sandra Rufino
      Pages: 40 - 45
      PubDate: 2022-06-18
      DOI: 10.24908/ijesjp.v9i1.15693
      Issue No: Vol. 9, No. 1 (2022)
       
  • Developing a progressive university/community connection: A shared
           conversation

    • Authors: Jessie Zarazaga, DeVincent Martin, Liz Thompson, Janice McMillan, Jerry McCann
      Pages: 46 - 53
      Abstract: In engineering education there is fairly wide recognition of the value of community-based work for student engineers. However, such interactions are often conflicted, spread between the fear that there might be some exploitation of the community for educational purposes, or perceptions of a lack of honest integration and participation by students, within their busy educational term-sessions. How can we, as academics, play a role in developing more progressive university and community connections, with greater intention in the role that students and universities play' In this shared conversation, four academics and a student participate in an online conversation over several months, developing a discourse that explores, and rather than proposing, and remains open to further exploration.
      PubDate: 2022-06-18
      DOI: 10.24908/ijesjp.v9i1.15101
      Issue No: Vol. 9, No. 1 (2022)
       
  • Experiences of art and technology from and with the southern maritorium

    • Authors: Ana Laura Cantera, Nataniel Alvarez, Sandra Ulloa, Eliseo Fica Rojas, Pamela Dominguez Bastidas, Rocio Rivera Marchevsky, Valentina Mendoza Cigna, Juan David Reina-Rozo
      Pages: 54 - 59
      Abstract: The purpose of this text is to share some reflections on the Radicante Navigable Residency 2021, carried out in the maritorio of the region of the Strait of Magellan and Chilean Antarctica. Historically, the southern territories now held by Chile and Argentina have been catalogued by Eurocentrism as the lands of the "end of the world". In several chronicles and countless novels these geographies of America have been presented as a place that agglomerated, on the one hand, the despair of its fanatics and, on the other hand, the most delirious illusions of a new place for human subsistence.
      PubDate: 2022-06-18
      DOI: 10.24908/ijesjp.v9i1.15298
      Issue No: Vol. 9, No. 1 (2022)
       
  • Start of a little big dream

    • Authors: Maria Elisa Palacios
      Pages: 60 - 61
      PubDate: 2022-06-18
      DOI: 10.24908/ijesjp.v9i1.15650
      Issue No: Vol. 9, No. 1 (2022)
       
  • Cultivating solidarity for action on social justice in engineering

    • Authors: Tomeka Carroll, Bethany Gordan, Patrick Hancock, Katelyn Stenger, Sydney Turner
      Pages: 62 - 91
      Abstract: As graduate students, we have witnessed and experienced firsthand how engineering education, due to engineering culture, can perpetuate harm and enhance systemic oppression and inequality in society. Documenting our efforts to counteract this status-quo, we share our individual and collective experience working to center social justice in engineering education. Using collaborative autoethnography, we qualitatively explore, through self-reflection, how we sought to integrate social justice into engineering education and developed a praxis of engineering social justice. Our group’s collaboratively developed praxis of engineering social justice seeks to overcome institutional and individual barriers to an integration of social justice in engineering practice by 1) fostering a reflexive practice through values and positionality, 2) engineering space for inclusive collaboration, and 3) seeing justice as a necessary lens for engineering education. Through this analysis of our personal experience, we hope to motivate and challenge readers to develop a praxis of engineering social justice that will inform their actions in this space.
      PubDate: 2022-06-18
      DOI: 10.24908/ijesjp.v9i1.15216
      Issue No: Vol. 9, No. 1 (2022)
       
  • Paz&flora, una iniciativa ambiental con conciencia de género: Entrevista
           con Cindy Lorena Ospina

    • Authors: Cindy Lorena Ospina Gallego, Angie Serna, Nicolás Gaitán-Albarracín, Alexei Ochoa-Duarte, Andrés Acero
      Pages: 92 - 102
      Abstract: Cindy Lorena Ospina Gallego es una colombiana, ingeniera Civil de la Universidad Politécnica de Cataluña. Viajera y apasionada por el cambio social. Al igual que su iniciativa, Paz&flora, nuestra conversación tocó varios puntos: la bioingeniería como experiencia de transformación, el rol social desde la ingeniería, el agua y el saneamiento como derecho en las zonas de asentamiento informal. Así como los retos de asumir un liderazgo con perspectiva de género y la importancia del empoderamiento en los procesos comunitarios.
      PubDate: 2022-06-18
      DOI: 10.24908/ijesjp.v9i1.15701
      Issue No: Vol. 9, No. 1 (2022)
       
  • Other Eyes on the Soil: An interview with Kristina Lyons

    • Authors: Kristina Lyons, Claudia Grisales Bohorquez, Nicolas Gaitan Albarracin, Jimena Zarazaga, Jessie Zarazaga, María Elisa Palacios-Passu
      Pages: 103 - 119
      Abstract: Kristina Lyons has a Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of California, Davis. She is currently Assistant Professor at the Department of Anthropology and the Environmental Humanities Program at the University of Pennsylvania (UPENN). Her work encompasses social studies of science, socio juridical studies, and socioecological conflicts in Latin america. Her book, “Vital Decomposition: Soil Practitioners and Life Politics” revolves around farms, laboratories and forests in the andean-amazonic department of Putumayo and the capital city of Bogota in Colombia. The book explores socioecological conflicts, proposals of territorial transformation, the work of soil scientists, and the forms of life of rural communities living amidst armed conflict and the anti narcotics politics of the United States and Colombia.
      PubDate: 2022-06-18
      DOI: 10.24908/ijesjp.v9i1.15648
      Issue No: Vol. 9, No. 1 (2022)
       
 
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