Managing Your Career in an Era of Change
Publication: Journal of Professional Issues in Engineering Education and Practice
Volume 124, Issue 3
Abstract
The practice of civil engineering is becoming more global each day. No longer is American know-how required on major international infrastructure projects. The Kansai Airport in Osaka, Japan, the Chek Lap Kok Airport in Hong Kong, the Three Gorges Dam in China, an open copper mine dam in Argentina, a major container port in the Netherlands, and a major dam construction in India are some examples of significant civil engineering projects with little or no American engineering involvement. You can also see this trend closer to home, where foreign firms are successfully “out bidding” America's firms for design and construction projects in the United States. With our society taking engineering for granted, U.S. civil engineers must retool or become obsolete, except as technical processors—using the computer to meet the requirements of codes, standards, and regulations.
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References
1.
American Consulting Engineers Council. (ACEC). (1996). Seeing into the future: The I book.
2.
Mizroah, J., and Gilles, S. (1997). “How to benefit from the changing global environmental market.”
3.
Schirmer, H. Jr.(1996). “Global expansion: A growing dilemma.”J. Mgmt. Engrg., ASCE, 12(5), 28–31.
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Copyright
Copyright © 1998 American Society of Civil Engineers.
History
Published online: Jul 1, 1998
Published in print: Jul 1998
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