Global Ideas Institute
2010-11 Expert Speaker Series
Dr. Ken Bassett | Dr. Anita McGahan | Dr. Peter A. Singer | Dr. Yu-Ling Cheng

Appropriate Technologies
for Global Development
February 17, 2011 | 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm
Munk School of Global Affairs, Room 108n
Dr. Yu-Ling Cheng
Director, Centre for Global Engineering; Professor, Department
of Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry, University of Toronto
What makes a technology appropriate for the developing world?
Is it extreme affordability? Is it independence from reliable
electricity? Is it social, cultural and political acceptability? Does
appropriate technology necessarily mean low-tech? We will
explore these questions by discussing a number of examples,
including: treadle pumps and low drip irrigation technologies for
farmers earning $1/day, a project in Bangladesh that makes use of
old sari cloth to fi lter cholera from drinking water, a novel
incubator for premature babies, battery-powered oxygenator for
treating childhood pneumonia, and a mini-case study of the
history of iodized salt in Ethiopia. We will also present some
examples of novel cutting edge drug delivery technologies for
treating diseases in the eye and discuss their appropriateness in
the developing world.
Professor Yu-Ling Cheng is Professor of Chemical Engineering
and Applied Chemistry, and the Director of the Centre for Global
Engineering at the University of Toronto. She is working on
enlarging the impact of technologies on the developing world
through both her work as a researcher and an engineering
educator. She is a member of the University Teaching Academy.
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