ESJP 2015: Day 3

The conference went on the road for day 3 to a town in the nearby mountains to visit a social justice movement where engineers and engineering have played a central role. Thanks again to UPRM for the resources they provided.

  
In 1980, the  Casa Pueblo movement was founded in response to the proposal to begin large open pit mining across the width of Puerto Rico. A team of activists including artists, scientists, and engineers protested the grave consequences the mining projects would create by founding Casa Pueblo. And, after mobilizing with the community, the movement successfully stopped the open pit mining campaign. One of the leaders of the movement, Alexis Mossol-Martinez, led a presentation to the audience about the movement and its history.

  
Today, the Casa Pueblo movement is still very active. One of its objectives has always been the creation of art in support of the movement, reflecting its commitment to art, a small school for music trains children from the community.

  
Casa Pueblo also runs an amazing “Escuela de Bosque” or Forest School. Here, Casa Pueblo educates the public about the importance of the rain forest to Puerto Rico’s survival.

  
The forest was beautiful, but unfortunately I didn’t get any pictures because of the rim and my desire to keep my phone dry. When we got back to the bus, the group was soaked, but happy to have visited.

  

Day 3 was also end of the conference. The conference was my first, and it was also the first conference that I had the opportunity to critically engage the engineering practice with a community of others. I hope to come back to many more, and hopefully, to places like Mayagüez who was such a great host.

ESJP 2015: Day 2

Day 2 continued on with the second and final day of presentations. One of which featured the imaginative and creative demonstration that encapsulated Dr Andrew Brightman’s empathy research at Purdue University. 

  
Dr Brightman’s demonstration asked audience members to identify the sensual experience of various interactions, like the sensations of eating a blueberry. By thinking deeply about their sensory perceptions, audience members could think about the common perceptions others might have had.

For lunch and dinner, participants dined on wonderful boricuan plates. The pastel featured below had a tasty yuca outside with a delicious chicken or pork stuffing.

  
Conference participants also had the privilege to visit the experimental station at the UPR-Mayagüez campus that is unique in a U.S. context. The experimental station features plant research that is only possible in the tropical climate of Puerto Rico. Suffice it to say, the plants here are beautiful and unique.   One of the trees growing at the station produced a beautiful flower with an equally beautiful fragrance.

  
Stay tuned for the final blog post about Day 3.

ESJP 2015: Day 1

This year, the University of Puerto Rico-Mayagüez played host to the 2015 Engineering, Social Justice, and Peace conference, and let me start off by saying how great of hosts the university has been and how lucky we are to have been able to learn from the knowledge shared by the presenters.
Presentations kicked off on Thursday. The day featured discussions about challenging dominant mindsets in the classroom as well the social justice centered work that is going on at UPR-M led by faculty across academic disciplines.


One of the great indulgences of the conference has been the food. The organizers have used the food to represent the beauty, creativity, and cultural convergence within Puerto Rican culture, and it has been quite effective to say the least. Dinner featured a delicious mashed root, tilapia, bananas, veggies, and a delicious bread pudding. If anything, the conference has been a tour de force of nourishment for both mind and body.

ESJP 2015: Call for Contributions

Make your plans to come to the

11th Annual Engineering, Social Justice, and Peace (ESJP) Conference !

The conference website is up with registration and detailed agenda.

September 3-6, 2015, UPRM Campus, Mayaguez, Puerto Rico

Call for Contributions (June 1 deadline for proposals; Sept 1 deadline for papers)

Llama para Contribuciones

Appel à Contributions

Apél de Patisipasyon

Launch of Agnese Nelms Haury program in Environment and Social Justice at University of Arizona

Subject: Launch of Agnese Nelms Haury program in Environment and Social Justice at University of Arizona

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We are pleased to announce the Agnese Nelms Haury program in Environment and Social Justice at the University of Arizona funded by a $50 million endowment to the UA Foundation from her estate.

The program will support many activities of interest to cultural and political ecologists open to all including a visiting fellows program (come to Tucson on sabbatical! We will have some openings for this spring) and conferences.

At the University of Arizona the program is supporting several initiatives led by geographers including some graduate awards, undergraduate student engagement programs led by geographer Sallie Marston and Ben Champion,  a border environment program coordinated by geographer Chris Scott etc.

Anthropology, archaeology, and southwest studies are also part of the program with strong links to cultural and political ecology.

As an aside, Mrs Haury’s was married to Emil Haury, friend of geographers, especially Carl Sauer. Mrs Haury herself was an amazing woman (see bio on web site)

For more information see:

haury.arizona.edu

(contact me if you are interested in a sabbatical visit of a month or so in Spring 2014)

Professor Diana Liverman
Institute of the Environment
University of Arizona
PO Box 210158b,
Tucson, Arizona 85721
liverman@email.arizona.edu
http://environment.arizona.edu/diana-liverman
[On sabbatical June 2014-July 2015]

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IJESJP: Call for papers 2014

The Editors of  the International Journal for Engineering, Social Justice and Peace (IJESJP) are currently inviting contributions. Now in its third year, this open-source journal publishes on a wide range of contemporary and historical issues related to engineering and its intersections with social justice and peace.

IJESJP seeks to advance engineering thinking and practices that enhance gender, racial, class, and cultural equity and are democratic, non-oppressive, and non-violent. The journal serves practicing engineers, engineering educators, social scientists, activists, and a broad audience interested in better understanding the progressive potential of engineering. Unhindered by the constraints of corporate publishing houses and their impulse for sales, IJESJP welcomes critical discourses on engineering, including its political-economic contexts. To practice our commitments, IJESJP is freely accessible on-line and uses a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License for all published content. IJESJP publishes scholarly articles, critical reflections, book reviews, editorials, and other formats as appropriate to the journal’s mission. Articles are refereed (double-blind peer review) and must be of high quality. The Editors work closely with reviewers to facilitate constructive feedback and advancing submitted manuscripts to publication with short lead time. IJESJP’s Editorial Board, Advisory Board, and authors are international and highly interdisciplinary.

IJESJP accepts manuscripts on an on-going basis. Papers for consideration for the first issue of 2014 must be received by April 1st. To submit an article, or to learn more about the journal, please visit our website at http://library.queensu.ca/ojs/index.php/IJESJP/about.

We look forward to your contributions!

The IJESJP Editors