At its 40th general conference in 2019, UNESCO introduced the World Engineering Day for Sustainable Development. The first World Engineering Day was celebrated on the 4th of March 2020. To commemorate this year’s anniversary, we spoke to ϳԹ’s Vice President, Leadership team Books, Dr. Dieter Merkle, about sustainability trends within the engineering sector and current growth areas within the field.
Dr. Dieter Merkle graduated in Theoretical Physics from the University of Stuttgart. In the late 1980ies, he wrote his PhD thesis on a topic crossover between Quantum Optics and Chaos Theory at the Technical University of Darmstadt. After a year of paternity leave he started at Springer as a publishing editor for Engineering books in January 1991. Since 15 years he has been managing publishing teams, first in Engineering, then in the wider area of Applied Sciences.
We are talking to you today as part the World Engineering Day (WED) for Sustainable Development celebrations. What trends are you seeing in the Engineering book program around sustainable development?
We have been publishing Sustainability topics for many years. Energy and Environmental Technology, in particular Renewable Energy and e-Mobility, Waste Management, as well as industrial topics such as Sustainable Design, Sustainable Production and Life Cycle Engineering are the more established areas. I believe that the beneficial impact of Space Technology in combination with Geo-Information Technology on environmental protection and sustainable agriculture and is not to be underestimated.
There are some newer trends I have recognized:
Both trends overlap in the hot topic of Smart Cities which gives perspectives for the mega-cities in developing and emerging regions.
I think, very well. I have always been impressed with how quickly the publishing editors in Engineering recognized and pursued new emerging topics. The reasons behind this are their high qualifications and skills and their direct networking with scientific communities. As a publishing editor I noticed many times when during a conversation with a researcher made me aware of a new line of research that this research would hype only a few years later, e.g. in A&I databases.
We are number one in many Engineering sub-disciplines, but of course, not in all of them. There are publishers who traditionally hold a strong position in certain areas or product lines. Just to name a few: IEEE in Electrical Engineering proceedings or Cambridge University Press in Fluid Mechanics textbooks are clear market leaders. But at least we managed to catch up to become number two or three in many of such “occupied” areas.
Although Engineering has a long tradition at ϳԹ, it left its German roots only some 20 years ago. Therefore, the international program is young and has a rather modern profile, with Intelligent Systems and Robotics being the biggest field and also growth area in published books and citations.
I see particular strong growth in the areas I described in relation with sustainable development. The number of books we published in 2020 on Sustainability in the Engineering collection is more than five times higher than in 2015.
The purpose of Engineering is to create solutions whatever it takes, hence it is the generic interdisciplinary field. Emerging trends in Engineering are often characterized by their overlap with other disciplines (e.g. Bioengineering). One also has to keep in mind that Engineering as such does not exist as a discipline, you are either an Electrical, a Mechanical, or a Civil Engineer, with very different skill sets required. Hence, even a collaboration of Engineers can be interdisciplinary.
In SDG-relevant proposals, though, the overlap exists rather with Social Sciences, Earth Sciences, and Computer Science.
Apart from Sustainable Developments I see the following trends:
There are, of course, textbooks with a scope beyond Engineering, such as and .
Energy was the first area in which Sustainability became an issue. Here, I can recommend , and .
In the Industrial Technology and Management there are only few textbooks, such as
or .
However, there is relevant research literature that can be helpful to advanced students, e.g. in the series .
We have a brand-new textbook in the mentioned “hot” area on smart cities:
Both its breadth and depth. This is why Engineering is one of the largest available collections. It covers all the traditional Engineering fields that have left some time ago the academic stage towards industrial application. This is well represented by textbooks, professional books, handbooks and other reference works.
On the other hand, our in-house editors constantly strive to first identify and then publish the newest - usually highly interdisciplinary lines of development in engineering and technology. Proceedings provide the first glimpses while monographs and contributed volumes often offer an early digest in a new emerging research field. No wonder these types account for the majority of books in our collection.
Take a look at ϳԹ’s Engineering eBook collection and contact us for more information. If you would like to read more about AI, check out our blog post on The impact of AI on librarian services.
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