Srikanth Chandrasekaran Keywords IEEE energy Read more about Srikanth Chandrasekaran Srikanth Chandrasekaran has been associated with the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) for the past 10 years focused on developing key standardisation programs that address core issues of security, identity, trust and building end-to-end trustworthy devices and systems across emerging areas such as IoT/Smart Cities, Quantum Computing, Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning, Sensors and Blockchain.
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers: Perspectives on Technology, Society, and Ethics Read more about Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers: Perspectives on Technology, Society, and Ethics One of the objectives of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) is to ensure that technology is harmoniously and sustainably harnessed for humanity. Recently, the IEEE has adopted a code of ethics. In this session, a leading member of IEEE outlines the organization’s perspective on social considerations and ethics, and the implications for social inclusion and gender equality in engineering practice. It also presents some practical examples of its work in community energy.
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers: Perspectives on Technology, Society, and Ethics Read more about Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers: Perspectives on Technology, Society, and Ethics The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) aims to advance technology for the benefit of humanity. This presentation provides examples, including a program called Digital Inclusion through Trust and Agency, to show how the IEEE is working to uphold its mission and address the key challenges of the 21st century.
Demand Side Management and the Prosumer: What, Who, and the Gender Equality and Social Inclusion Implications Read more about Demand Side Management and the Prosumer: What, Who, and the Gender Equality and Social Inclusion Implications Improving the uptake of energy efficiency and demand side management policies and programs requires a better understanding of the human aspect of energy use, including behavioral and societal drivers and barriers, and external and internal contexts. Behavioral interventions using technology, market and business models, and changes to the supply and delivery of energy are the all-important means to that end.
Energy Technology Innovation in South Asia: Implications for Gender Equality and Social Inclusion Read more about Energy Technology Innovation in South Asia: Implications for Gender Equality and Social Inclusion While Asia’s low-carbon energy transition is well underway with the development of smart grids, social inequity is emerging among other challenges. Drawing more women into renewable energy and energy efficiency program designs and consultations is not only an equal employment opportunity issue but is crucially about how the world is shaped and for whom.