Journal of Critical Infrastructure Policy Volume 1, Number 2, Fall/Winter 2020 | Page 89

COVID-19 Implications for Research and Education on Engineered Structures and Services
Journal of Critical Infrastructure Policy • Volume 1 , Number 2 • Fall / Winter 2020

COVID-19 Implications for Research and Education on Engineered Structures and Services

David Mendonça Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute , Dept of Industrial & Systems Engineering Corresponding Author , mendod @ rpi . edu
José Orlando Gomes Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro , Brazil
Tracy Kijewski-Correa
University of Notre Dame , Keough School of Global Affairs and College of Engineering
Ann-Margaret Esnard Georgia State University , Department of Public Management & Policy
Julio Ramirez Purdue University , Lyles School of Civil Engineering
Abstract
While there may be a tendency to characterize COVID-19 as exclusively a public health issue , engineered structures and services have both mitigated and exacerbated the pandemic ’ s march around the globe , raising questions about the role of engineering in controlling pandemics . Any attempts to answer these questions implicate not only the tools , techniques and problems which we define as within the province of engineering , but also the means by which we arrive at this definition . As described here — in settings ranging from nursing homes to prisons to Brazilian favelas — the COVID-19 crisis has upended a number of foundational notions associated with the practice of hazard mitigation through the design and operation of engineered structures and services . It has revealed the need to examine the conditions and assumptions that characterize the models we construct and the data we collect . We do so through a number of case studies collected during the COVID-19 crisis , leading to implications for the conduct of research and education to support not only further advances in our field but to improved prospects for improved mitigation of pandemics and other hazards .
85 doi : 10.18278 / jcip . 1.2.6