Dame Jo da Silva | |
---|---|
Born | Joanna Gabrielle da Silva 1967 (age 56–57) |
Alma mater | University of Cambridge (BA, MA) |
Employer | Arup Group |
Awards | Doctor of Technology (2014) Gold Medal of the Institution of Structural Engineers (2017) |
Dame Joanna Gabrielle da Silva (born 1967) is the Global Director of Sustainable Development at Arup Group. [1] [2]
Da Silva was born in Washington, D.C. [3] to John Burke da Silva CMG and Jennifer Jane da Silva. [4] She studied engineering at the University of Cambridge where she was a student at Trinity College, Cambridge. [4] [5] She graduated in 1988 and then travelled, seeing the roles of engineers first-hand. She worked in central India on emergency management. [3]
Da Silva joined Arup Group as a graduate engineer in 1989. [6] She was part of the development of the Hong Kong International Airport and National Portrait Gallery, London. [7] She began to work in post-disaster engineering in 1991. [6] In 2001, she was selected as one of Management Today's 35 Women Under 35. [8] She has investigated the relationship between populations and the built environment, in particular the role of infrastructure in reducing vulnerability. [9] [10]
In 2009, da Silva founded the Arup International Development group, a non-profit subsidiary of Arup Group which works with organisations that look to improve the coordination of infrastructure development in the developing world. [11] She is a member of RedR, Engineers for Disaster Relief, a charity which has thousands of engineers who will respond quickly after a disaster. [12] Arup encourage humanitarian efforts to build back better, preventing homes being destroyed when floods or disasters return. [13]
Da Silva is a specialist in disaster reduction and has worked with various humanitarian groups. She worked with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Sri Lanka after the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami. [14] She coordinated the efforts of over 100 humanitarian agencies and the building of over 60,000 shelters in six months. [5] [15] From 2008 to 2017, she worked with Sabre Education to develop a series of early-years learning facilities in Ghana. [16] [17] The work was supported by the Institution of Civil Engineers. [18] She has since been working with the World Bank on a Global Program for Safer Schools. [19] Da Silva worked with Tower Hamlets Council on Ideas Stores, a way to bring IT facilities to communities in East London. [5]
Da Silva was elected as Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (FREng) in 2009. [20]
She was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 2011 for services to engineering and humanitarian relief [21] and Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in the 2021 New Year Honours for services to engineering and international, sustainable development. [22] [23]
In 2012, she became the first woman to deliver the Institution of Civil Engineers Brunel International Lecture, discussing the role of engineers in responding to disaster. [24] She was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Technology (DTech) degree from Coventry University in 2014. [3] She was featured in a 2015 Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering and 2016 Victoria and Albert Museum campaigns describing her career in engineering. [25] [26]
She is founder and on the Board of the Lloyd's Register and Arup-supported global programme to accelerate critical infrastructure resilience, "The Resilience Shift", [27] which stimulates improved resilience and whole-system thinking through thought leadership, grant making, and convening. [28]
Da Silva was awarded the Gold Medal of the Institution of Structural Engineers in 2017 for her work in urban resilience. [29] She delivered her Gold Medal lecture at Trinity College Dublin in 2018, talking about Design, Disaster and Development. [19]
She delivered the 2018 Judith Neilson Lecture at the University of New South Wales. [13]
In 2021, Da Silva was named a Dame for her work within disaster relief and sustainability in locations such as Haiti and Sri Lanka. [30]
In November 2021 she was recognised as a Royal Designer for Industry for her sustainable design. [31]
In November 2021 Da Silva was the guest on the long running BBC Radio 4 programme Desert Island Discs.
Mercy Corps is a global non-governmental, humanitarian aid organization operating in transitional contexts that have undergone, or have been undergoing, various forms of economic, environmental, social and political instabilities. The organization claims to have assisted more than 220 million people survive humanitarian conflicts, seek improvements in livelihoods, and deliver durable development to their communities.
The Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE) is an independent professional association for civil engineers and a charitable body in the United Kingdom. Based in London, ICE has over 92,000 members, of whom three-quarters are located in the UK, while the rest are located in more than 150 other countries. The ICE aims to support the civil engineering profession by offering professional qualification, promoting education, maintaining professional ethics, and liaising with industry, academia and government. Under its commercial arm, it delivers training, recruitment, publishing and contract services. As a professional body, ICE aims to support and promote professional learning, managing professional ethics and safeguarding the status of engineers, and representing the interests of the profession in dealings with government, etc. It sets standards for membership of the body; works with industry and academia to progress engineering standards and advises on education and training curricula.
Arup is a British multinational professional services firm headquartered in London that provides design, engineering, architecture, planning, and advisory services across every aspect of the built environment. It employs about 17,000 people in over 90 offices across 35 countries, and has participated in projects in over 160 countries.
The United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS) is a United Nations agency dedicated to implementing humanitarian and development projects for the United Nations System, international financial institutions, governments and other partners around the world, with a focus on infrastructure, procurement and project management The organization's global headquarters is located at the UN City campus in Copenhagen, Denmark. UNOPS delivers around $3 billion worth of development projects for its partners every year. Its activities have ranged from managing the construction of schools in Afghanistan, to building shelters in Haiti, to procuring ambulances to support the Ebola response in Liberia.
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Dr Edmund Cadbury Hambly was a British structural engineer.
Humanitarian engineering is the application of engineering for humanitarian aid purposes. As a meta-discipline of engineering, humanitarian engineering combines multiple engineering disciplines in order to address many of the world's crises and humanitarian emergencies, especially to improve the well-being of marginalized populations.
The Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering is the academic department at Imperial College London dedicated to civil engineering. It is located at the South Kensington Campus in London, along Imperial College Road. The department is currently a part of the college's Faculty of Engineering, which was formed in 2001 when Imperial College restructured. The department has consistently ranked within the top five on the QS World University Rankings in recent years.
RedR is an international NGO whose stated mission is to “rebuild lives in times of disaster by training, supporting, and providing aid workers to relief programmes across the world.” It was originally an acronym for Register of Engineers for Disaster Relief, although it is no longer used as such.
Urban resilience has conventionally been defined as the "measurable ability of any urban system, with its inhabitants, to maintain continuity through all shocks and stresses, while positively adapting and transforming towards sustainability".
Professor Sir James Rufus McDonald is a British engineer and educator, serving as principal and vice-chancellor of the University of Strathclyde since 2009. He served as the president of the Royal Academy of Engineering between 2019-2024, and is also a visiting professor at NYU Tandon School of Engineering.
Jean Venables is a British civil engineer who in November 2008 became the 144th President of the Institution of Civil Engineers, the first woman to be elected to the position.
Jane Melville Wernick CBE FREng is a British structural engineer and a consultant to engineersHRW. Having founded Jane Wernick Associates in 1998, she gave the firm to an employee trust in 2010 and it was incorporated into engineersHRW in May 2015. Previously, she worked at Arup (1976–1998). During her career with Arup, and later with Jane Wernick Associates, she was closely involved with projects including Stansted Airport terminal building and the London Eye.
In 2016 the Women's Engineering Society (WES), in collaboration with the Daily Telegraph, produced an inaugural list of the United Kingdom's Top 50 Influential Women in Engineering, which was published on National Women in Engineering Day on 23 June 2016. The event was so successful it became an annual celebration. The list was instigated by Dawn Bonfield MBE, then Chief Executive of the Women's Engineering Society. In 2019, WES ended its collaboration with the Daily Telegraph and started a new collaboration with The Guardian newspaper.
Rachel Susan Skinner is a British civil engineer with Canadian-based consultant WSP Global. She was named one of the Daily Telegraph Top 50 Influential Women in Engineering in 2016 and both the Best Woman Civil Engineer and the Most Distinguished Winner at the European Women in Construction and Engineering Awards in 2017. Skinner became the youngest president of the Institution of Civil Engineers in 2020. In 2019, she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (FREng). She was appointed CBE for services to infrastructure in the 2022 New Year Honours.
Yewande Akinola is a Chartered Engineer who specialises in sustainable water supplies. She works as Principal Engineer for Laing O'Rourke and hosts television shows about engineering for Channel 4 and National Geographic.
Faith Helen Wainwright is a British structural engineer, and a director of Arup Group. She has led in the structural design of multiple landmark buildings including the American Air Museum and the Tate Modern and holds an honorary doctorate from the University of Bath. Wainwright is the 2018 President of the Institution of Structural Engineers and sits on the Editorial Board of Ingenia.
Lucy Elizabeth Rogers is a British author, inventor, and engineer. She is a visiting professor of engineering, creativity and communication at Brunel University London and has served as a judge on the BBC Two show Robot Wars from 2016 to 2018.
Dame Dervilla Mary Mitchell FREng FIEI is an Irish engineer and a director and joint deputy chair of Arup Group. She led the management of the design for London Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5, and as of 2019 was project director for Arup for a 2-billion dollar airport terminal development in Abu Dhabi. She is a Fellow of two national engineering academies, and the holder of an Honorary CBE.
Sarah Jayne Bell is the City of Melbourne Chair in Urban Resilience and Innovation at the University of Melbourne, Australia, and Honorary Professor of Environmental Engineering at The Bartlett School in University College London (UCL). She works on urban water systems. She was the Director of the UCL Engineering Exchange during her 16 years as a Professor of Environmental Engineering at UCL.
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