Go to Infrastructure in the Anthropocene
About
Infrastructure in the Anthropocene
At the dawn of the Anthropocene, the systems that deliver basic and critical services for human well being and economic development are poised to be shocked. Transitioning infrastructure — assets, governance, and education — is paramount to ensure that needs are met.
Note from the editor

At the dawn of the Anthropocene, the systems that deliver basic and critical services for human well being and economic development are poised to be shocked. Transitioning infrastructure — assets, governance, and education — is paramount to ensure that needs are met.

Editors
Go to the profile of Mikhail Chester
Mikhail Chester
Professor of Sustainable Engineering and Director of the Metis Center for Infrastructure and Sustainable Engineering at Arizona State University.
Writers
Go to the profile of Alysha Helmrich
Alysha Helmrich
Assistant Professor in the College of Engineering at The University of Georgia
Go to the profile of Brad Allenby
Brad Allenby
Brad Allenby, J.D., Ph.D., is President’s Professor of Engineering, and Lincoln Professor of Engineering and Ethics, at Arizona State University.
Go to the profile of Madison Horgan