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THIS PROGRAM WILL NOT BE HELD IN SUMMER 2008
WE HOPE TO RESUME THE PROGRAM IN SUMMER 2009
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A selection of photos from the 2006 REU class students
This
Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU)
program is open to students majoring in the following
(or related) disciplines:
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Any field of Engineering,
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Students can elect to perform their 10 weeks of research at either Michigan Technological University (Houghton, Michigan) or Southern University and A&M College (Baton Rouge, Louisiana).
Dates: May 29 to August 3, 2007 (Arrival is on May 27, Orientation is May 28)
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Introduction
In only 12 years – between 1987 and 1999 – the world’s
population increased by 20 percent, from 5 to 6 billion. This
growth, In only 12 years – between 1987 and 1999 –
the world’s population increased by 20 percent, from 5 to
6 billion. This growth, combined with dramatic increases in per
capita resource consumption, contributes to increasingly serious
social and environmental problems.
These
problems will only worsen over the next 50 years as the projected
world population nears 12 billion and developing nations become
more industrialized. We are using finite nonrenewable resources
at an ever-increasing rate, with little regard for future generations.
Facing these facts, we are compelled to ask: are Earth and humankind
sustainable?
People,
governments and industries worldwide must adopt policies and practices
that promote sustainable development. In the mid-1980s, the United
Nations World Commission on Environment and Development, chaired
by former Norwegian Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland, formulated
the widely-cited definition of sustainable development: satisfying
present needs without compromising the ability of future generations
to meet their own needs.
Despite
warnings by the Bruntland Commission and others about the threats
posed by problems such as climate change, loss of biological diversity,
and depletion of nonrenewable resources, little progress has been
made in implementing changes that are essential for a sustainable
future. Worldwide, society is not on a sustainable course.
In
the coming decades, students with expertise in sustainability
issues and planning will be in great demand as the world tries
to reverse this looming global crisis.
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Several
years ago, faculty members from a diverse set of disciplines
at Michigan Tech began collaborating on sustainability issues.
Their activity produced the Sustainable Futures Model, which
will serve as the thematic basis and intellectual focus
of this proposed REU Site.
The
Sustainable Futures Model focuses on research and education
in four areas:
The
Sustainable Futures Model is a meta-disciplinary endeavor
that integrates research from across multiple disciplines.
In
recognition of the emerging importance of sustainability,
Michigan Tech recently founded the Sustainable Futures Institute
(SFI). SFI's mission is to help create and disseminate new
methods and processes that generate scientific knowledge
and engineering products in support of sustainability decisions
and education.
SFI
has been collaborating with the College of Engineering and
the Nelson Mandela School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs
at Southern University and A & M College at Baton Rouge
(SUBR) on several education and research initiatives. One
unique aspect of this REU program is it joins students and
faculty from both the engineering/science disciplines and
the social science/economics disciplines to study and to
conduct research on sustainability issues.
This
REU in Sustainability combines the strengths of Michigan
Tech, located in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan along the
shores of Lake Superior, with those of Southern University,
located in Louisiana's capitol city along the banks of the
lower Mississippi River.
The
two universities are different in many respects, but they
share expertise in the field of sustainability and a mutual
commitment to the value of undergraduate research. The partnership
between the schools broadens the cultural, technical, and
world views that each institution can offer its students.
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Further
reading:
Mihelcic,
JR “Educating Tomorrow’s Global Engineer through a
Unique Partnership with the U.S. Peace Corps,” Woman
Engineer, 30-33, Fall, 2004.
Mihelcic,
JR, “Educating the Future’s Water Professional, "
Water Environment Technology, 16(9): 86-92, 2004.
Mihelcic,
JR, et al. “Sustainability Science and Engineering: Emergence
of a New Metadiscipline,” Environmental Science &
Technology, 37(23), 5314-5324, 2003.
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