Walsh School of Foreign Service Archives - ̳ of Arts & Sciences /tag/walsh-school-of-foreign-service/ Tue, 08 Jul 2025 14:06:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 Hot Off the Presses: How 3D Printing Could Help Construction Go Green /news-story/3d-cement-paper/ Thu, 23 Feb 2023 16:19:47 +0000 /?p=13862 3D printing has the potential to upend the cement industry and, if used correctly, reduce the carbon footprint of the construction process, according to from Georgetown researchers published in Communications Engineering. 

The cement industry, which accounts for about 8% of global carbon dioxide emissions, is both notoriously carbon intensive and inextricably tied to future population growth and development. Concrete and cement are also some of the most used resources in the world, second only to water in terms of consumption, the researchers noted. 

A woman in a blue blouse smiles in front of a gray background.

Emanuela Del Gado, director of the Institute for Soft Matter Synthesis and Metrology.

In their joint paper, , a professor in the , and , a Distinguished Associate Professor of Energy and Environment, argue that  reducing the cement industry’s impact on the environment will not only help the U.S. meet its goals under the Paris Agreement but will also empower construction companies around the world to use greener products. 

Cleaner Structures, Cleaner Mixtures

3D printing uses computers to build three-dimensional structures through an additive process, using pliable materials like plastic to print out an object layer by layer. The study’s authors recommend taking advantage of 3D printing’s unique capabilities to rethink the structures that are made with cement and find ways to make the material itself less resource-intensive. 

“Through structural design optimization and functional hybridization in construction, cement-based construction 3D printing can be used to fabricate structures that use less cementitious materials, decrease the need for formwork and reduce waste, overall reducing emissions compared to conventional concrete construction,” said Del Gado,  director of the .  

The largest chunk of the process’s carbon emissions — accounting for more than 50% — comes from firing powdered limestone in a rotating kiln to form clinker, the building block of cement. Cement-based construction 3D printing (C3DP) has the opportunity to use lower-footprint mixtures that contain filler materials like industrial waste products and soil-based additives. Construction manufacturers need to be encouraged to develop greener cement mixtures for C3DP, the paper’s authors argue. Simply relying on the increased usage of C3DP isn’t enough as more carbon-intensive mixtures can be used. 

Prioritizing Policy

A woman in a white blouse and dark jacket smiles in front of bookshelves.

Joanna Lewis, director of the Science, Technology and International Affairs Program in the Walsh School of Foreign Service. 

Already, stakeholders in both the private and public sector are interested in 3D printing. The U.S. Department of Defense is advocating for incorporating 3D printing in concrete construction and Dubai plans to use 3D printing in a quarter of all new construction by 2030. These plans, however, do not explicitly integrate carbon reduction.

“It is crucial for policymakers to recognize that unless programs and projects to demonstrate C3DP are designed with climate change in mind, the technology could end up incentivizing printable cementitious mixtures with higher as opposed to lower carbon footprints,” said Lewis, who is also director of the Science, Technology and International Affairs Program in the Walsh School of Foreign Service. 

To guide C3DP towards reduced carbon output, Del Gado and Lewis propose a five-step action plan centered around researching printable low-carbon cementitious mixtures, freely sharing that research and encouraging public-private partnerships to prioritize low-carbon development. 


Lewis and Del Gado note that this paper came out of a new interdisciplinary collaboration funded in part by an Earth Commons “” and led by their shared postdoctoral fellow, Ankita Gangotra, which allowed Del Gado, a physicist, and Lewis, a climate policy expert, to examine this technology which has important implications for the construction industry and for national competitiveness in advanced manufacturing.

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Georgetown ̳ Hosts Racial Justice Speaker Series to Promote Equity and Inclusion /news-story/georgetown-college-hosts-racial-justice-speaker-series-to-promote-equity-and-inclusion/ Thu, 24 Sep 2020 21:43:01 +0000 /?p=8597 Next week, Georgetown ̳ will host its first event in the series in order to explore how research by Georgetown faculty advances racial justice and how the university may continue to work for a more equitable community at the university level and beyond. Starting Wednesday, September 30 and happening each week in the month of October, faculty panelists will discuss how race and racism intersect with areas like the arts, gender, immigration, health and criminal justice so that every Hoya may holistically undertake one of the pillars of the Jesuit tradition: care for each person in their entirety. 

“The Racial Justice Speaker Series represents one part of the necessary work we must do to recognize and then act on the deeply embedded racial inequities in our society,” says Christopher Celenza, dean of Georgetown ̳. “Our diverse and interdisciplinary speakers will bring different perspectives to this ongoing conversation. I appreciate the work they are doing and am honored that the ̳ will be hosting this series.”

Research and Racial Justice

These conversations invite faculty from various departments and programs across campus, including the , the , the , and the . 

, vice dean and Idol Family Professor of the ̳ of Arts and Sciences says that the title of the series draws from Esther 4:14. 

“I understand this passage as a call to action and responsibility for those put in positions of power,” says Colbert. “The series will consider how Georgetown faculty’s research advances racial justice and how racial justice produces certain responsibilities for researchers. We will consider how the pursuit of justice informs the impact of each speaker’s work, understanding that pursuit as a fundamental part of being a faculty member at Georgetown.”

This series is part of the new Racial Justice Initiative which will be formally launched through Georgetown ̳ next semester. It’s first course, Anti-Black Racism: History and Ideology, Justice and Resistance, will be taught by Colbert and , a professor in the African American Studies department. 

“Racial justice and anti-racist praxis require a mastery of the histories that created, cultivated, and exacerbated racial inequities, and that threaten to make these inequities insurmountable without thoughtful, systematic, and energetic thinking, planning and implementation,” says Patterson. “This course equips students with both the knowledge and skills necessary to think about and enact racial justice, exploring the complexities, complications, and contradictions that emerge when trying to create a beloved community and more perfect union that center Black communities and Black citizens.  

“Situated firmly in the historical and pedagogical mission of Black Studies, this course equips students to address these opportunities,” he concludes.

These conversations have been scheduled from 12:00-1:00 pm EST on Wednesdays throughout the month of October, starting on Wednesday, September 30, 2020, and concluding on Wednesday, October 28, 2020.

To watch the series, please visit our .

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