Apr 13, 2021
In episode 230, Kestrel welcomes Kiana Kazemi, a current undergraduate student at UC Berkeley, studying the intersections of technology and environmental justice, to the show. The Editor in Chief of the campus environmental publication The Leaflet and the Digital and Community Operations Coordinator at Intersectional Environmentalist, Kiana is also the Co-Founder and CEO of Circularity, a soon-to-launch multi-medium environmental justice platform.
On this week’s show, Kiana shares more on her backstory, what led her to pursue engineering, and what being an “intersectional engineer” means to her. Also, she helps provide some historical context on the ways in which engineering has and continues to perpetuate systemic injustices.
For Kiana, community engineering is important for a more equitable future — she shares more on what this means to her, and how it can be more effectively integrated into practice for the engineering and tech industries.
Of course technology perpetuates racism. It was designed that way. by Charlton McIlwain in the MIT Technology Review
Khalid Kadir, professor Kiana mentions
“Because engineering is often about innovation and about the future, we’re never told to study the past or even the current systems — it’s always about create, create, create more, innovate more and think about the future. But again, if we don’t take into account that context and that history, then we’re just going to perpetuate those same problems over and over again.” -Kiana
Why intersectional environmental pedagogy belongs in all fields by Kiana Kazemi
Engineering x Social Justice Conversation with Kiana Kazemi and Diandra Marizet
Co-Founder of Circularity (launching soon!)
Tech Community Leader at Intersectional Environmentalist
Slow Factory Foundation, founded by Céline Semaan