Designing with Communities
The Humanitarian Engineering Program educates engineers and scientists to work as partners with communities seeking to enhance their social, environmental, and economic sustainability.
Students in the program learn to take a sociotechnical approach to make a difference in the world through their professional careers, whether in community development or corporate settings.
Graduate students and faculty also inform HE education by conducting leading research at the intersection of engineering and social science. To learn how you can become involved in Humanitarian Engineering, please explore our webpages or contact us.
Our Programs
HE has a variety of education, research, outreach, and engagement programs, with two focus areas: Engineering for Sustainable Development and Corporate Social Responsibility.
Educational programs for undergraduates include 18-credit undergraduate minors in each of our two focus areas, Engineering for Community Development (ECD) and Leadership in Social Responsibility (LSR), and a 12-credit Area of Special Interest (ASI) in HE. Undergraduate students can also pick ECD or LSR as a focus area in the Design Engineering BS degree. Graduate students can enroll in a 9-credit certificate program or a 30-credit Master’s Degree in Humanitarian Engineering and Science. Many undergraduate and graduate students participate in HE research projects. And, all students can take classes in HE or participate in an HE-related project through design classes, student clubs, the Peace Corps Prep program, and our Engineering with Communities Design Studio.
Click below for more information on each of these opportunities.
HE News and Events

Congratulations to the HE Program graduates and all the Mines Fall 2024 graduates!
Learn about the recent HE grads and catch up on our fall activities in our latest newsletter!
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT…
For additional HE news and events, please visit our LinkedIn page for the most up-to-date information! And check out our Humanitarian Engineering Media, News & Events page!
Our Impact
- HE@Mines started in 2003 as the first such curricular program in the US and has inspired similar programs at many other schools
- The HE program allocates annual graduate and undergraduate scholarships, supporting more than 135 students in the program since 2014
- Over 500 students each year take nearly twenty different HE-related undergraduate and graduate courses
- Over 156 students have graduated with an HE minor since program inception and 27 MS students since 2020
- The Engineering with Communities Design Studio and the Mines Capstone Senior Design program hosts dozens of HE-related projects each year, giving senior engineering students real-world practice in applying their HE skills
- Students also carry out HE-in-Action projects through graduate theses and practicums, several project -based classes, and student clubs such as Mines Without Borders
- The graduate program is home to a vibrant , exciting interdisciplinary community of engineers, scientists, and scholars
- Mines faculty are world-leading scholars in HE and have written numerous books and give many seminars each year to colleagues all over the world, funded by NSF, Department of Energy, and others
Learn More
Want to hear some professionals share their experiences with Humanitarian Engineering? Please check out our Humanitarian Engineering and Science colloquium lectures and our Gold Nuggets Humanitarian Engineering interview series!
learn about our projects
Harnessing the power of engineering and social science, we work directly with communities to jointly define problems and create sustainable solutions.
What it’s like in HE@Mines
Student Project
in social Innovation
RESPONSIBLE MINING, RESILIENT COMMUNITIES
Learn more about our partnership with RMRC @ Mines. “We are an interdisciplinary, multi-institution, and global research collaboration funded by the US National Science Foundation. Our goal is to co-design socially responsible and sustainable mining practices with communities, engineers, and social scientists.”
Learn how to work with International Communities
Support the Program
