About DEMAND
DEMAND—ASME Global Development Review, is a publication launched by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) to help meet the needs of individuals and organizations working at the intersection of technology and global development.
This publication showcases a mix of case studies from social innovators around the world, original articles investigating overarching issues impacting global development, and condensed reports from EngineeringForChange.org. The perspectives from the field are combined with infographics, videos and photos demonstrating the diverse challenges and solutions emerging in the global development space.
DEMAND is written by social innovators involved in developing and delivering appropriate technology-based solutions to benefit the environment, public health, and infrastructure. The mission is to promote shared learning through in-depth examinations of technology as well as the programmatic and community challenges faced by nonprofits, socially responsible businesses, academic programs, and government agencies engaged in global development. DEMAND’s case studies capture best practices and innovations in the space and tackle thematic areas in global development and applications, ranging from product design and technical performance to distribution and evaluation models.
The unifying thread is the unique viewpoint—through an engineering lens—and a demonstration of stakeholder-driven innovation as a model for solving the most pressing challenges of disadvantaged communities.
The case studies in DEMAND undergo evaluation both by an independent editorial review board and by ASME editors. DEMAND strives to excite the greater engineering community to develop solutions that are in demand.
DEMAND is published in collaboration with Mechanical Engineering magazine, which has been published by ASME since 1880. ASME promotes the art, science and practice of multidisciplinary engineering and allied sciences around the globe.
by M####:
I like it! The text is small but these old eyes need reading glasses and with the specs, I can read just fine. I would like to be able to expand the view. Articles are interesting. I think it has great potential.