Conference Proceedings (Ethics)

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    Training for professionalism:
    (2016-09-30) Kamweri, J. M. M.
    If we are in search for proof of the grand ingenuity of modern engineering, we need look no further than the success of the recent JUNO mission to Jupiter. That engineers and scientists can capture our remotest imaginations and stylishly actualize them in real-life settings is awesome. To maintain these standards, engineers are expected to commit to professionalism through: rigorous specific training, robust ethical conduct, and hearty service to others, institutionalization of the specific knowledge and skill, and, dedication to engineering as means for livelihood. To be engineering professionals is to be trusted that you take seriously the obligation to dutifully serve the needs of others and not to prey on clients’ vulnerability. For this cause, vigilance on the part of engineering professional body necessitates the formulation of effective ethical framework for monitoring and evaluation of performance and results at all levels of: design, planning, implementation, management, and assessment. With the help and protection of the state, engineering professional ought to cultivate ethical leadership and create a culture and environment that prioritizes ethics.
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    Stewards of the Natural Environmental Resources:
    (Duquesne University, 2015-09) Kamweri, J. M. M.
    The slogan often used to describe the scenic beauty of Uganda’s natural environment is ‘Gifted by Nature.’ Rightly so, Uganda is home to Lake Victoria and four other lakes, not to mention crater lakes. Of the 241,550 sq km surface area, 41,743 sq km is covered by water and swamps. Forest cover was estimated at14.95% in 2010. The country receives between 700-3,000 mm/year rainfall, and temperature of 16C-31C. To protect Uganda’s environmental resources the government enacted the National Environment Act in 1995 right after the Rio de Janeiro Summit (1992). The Act provided for the formation of National Management Environment Authority (NEMA) mandated with coordinating, monitoring, and supervising environment related activities. Twenty years down the road, there are fewer success stories; necessitating rethinking the approach. In fact NEMA’s State of the Environment Report of the year 2010 and recent dossiers, on the subject, casts a worrying trend on the sustainability of the country’s natural environment resources. Uganda faces severe soil erosion, decline in soil fertility, deforestation, pollution, loss of biodiversity, and, depletion of forest cover, fish and water resources. These environmental problems have been evidenced by the recurring Bududa landslides in Eastern Uganda, the near annihilation of wetlands in Kampala Central Division, and encroachmenton Mabira tropical forest. New strategies for sustainability of Uganda’s natural environment resources are needed. Beyond NEMA, the Association of Religious in Uganda has an obligation to engage the communities in a God given mandate of stewardship of the natural environment resources – to protect and restore. Protection of the natural environment requires being good stewards of what counts as a common good. Repairing what is damaged calls for commitment to restorative justice. For, nature harbors a reciprocity principle – we take good care of the natural environment resources, nature takes good care of us.