ISSMGE Bulletin – Volume 4 Issue 4 December 2010

ISSMGE Bulletin - Volume 4 Issue 4 December 2010


Inside This Issue

1 Message to ISSMGE from the Vice President
10 Country Report Ghana
12 Future of ISSMGE
15 Case History
26 Technical News
31 News
48 News on New Journal
49 News for Future Event
52 Message from Editor
53 New TC’s of ISSMGE
61 Event Diary
64 Editorial Remarks
65 Corporate Associates
67 Foundation Donors

Editorial Board

Jean-Louis Briaud
Ikuo Towhata
Neil Taylor
Pedro Sêco e Pinto
Pongsakorn Punrattanasin
Deepankar Choudhury
Imen Said
Erdin Ibraim
Cholachat Rujikiatkamjorn
Susumu Nakajima

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Message to ISSMGE from the Vice President for Africa

Professor Samuel Uche Ejezie

Professor Samuel Uche EjezieDear professional colleagues of the geotechnical engineering family. My message is intended to sound like an echo reverberating from a Region where geotechnical engineering problems abound, yet the general world-wide perception remains that the profession is relatively not well-developed here. I have therefore programmed this message to cover the report of activities within the region both in the recent past and the present, as well as highlights of our key thrusts for the future.

On my assumption of office in Alexandria last year, I did pledge to work towards closer cooperation among African Member Societies of ISSMGE from North to South and from East to West (Fig. 1). This is with a view to integrating geotechnical engineering activities around the continent so that solutions to geotechnical engineering problems experienced in many parts of the region may be found within Africa itself. To demonstrate my continued commitment to this pledge, I made it a point of duty to participant in every event being organised by any African Member Society of ISSMGE. In the same vein I strongly encouraged our African members to join me in this crusade since it is for the good of our region. In fact, I have continued to advocate that geotechnical engineering should be practised in Africa without boarders so that we can together find local solutions to our ground engineering problems. The benefits of this cooperation have started manifesting, judging from the wide geographical spread of participants recorded in events organised by member societies in the Region in recent times. To me, the era of using models developed for soils of other climatic zones to solve problems related to the engineering behaviour of African soils is over. We have to work together to develop appropriate modes for soils of Africa.

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Download ISSMGE Bulletin – Volume 4 Issue 4 December 2010
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