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Solomon Diamond, Emily Monroe, and Paula Olson
Winner of the 2026 Constellation Prize for Peace Engineering

People Observing Art
Students in Library

“Not only are engineers absent from governing councils, but the public seems to view the engineering temperament as unsuited to political life....but much engineering work today is vitally important...it relates
to survival, for us and our children’s children."
 

 

Solomon Diamond, Emily Monroe, and Paula Olson, recognized for their groundbreaking work in Peace Engineering, demonstrate how engineers can design preventative measures against violence directly into the infrastructure of technology.

 

In a world where 3D-printed Machine Gun Conversion Devices (MCDs) can turn legal firearms into fully automatic weapons in minutes, this team confronted a complex socio-technical challenge. The resurgence of fully automatic weapons in crimes, the accessibility of digital manufacturing, and the involvement of young people in producing these devices created a crisis of lethality that could not be addressed through traditional regulation alone. Rather than taking a political stance, Diamond, Monroe, and Olson approached the problem through engineering design, asking how technology itself could be made safer.

 

Their approach, Disarming Violence by Design, reframes the challenge from punitive enforcement to preventative engineering. By using human-centered design principles, geometric analysis, and deep learning, the team created systems that automatically recognize components of MCDs and prevent their production, without monitoring unrelated user activity or restricting open-source creativity. By modifying the firmware and G-code—the “DNA” of the manufacturing process—they introduced a precise intervention that protects human life while preserving technological uses for educational and creative purposes.

 

Equally vital is the team’s commitment to ethical stewardship and education. They brought together diverse stakeholders, including ATF officials, civil servants, prosecutors, academic institutions, and students. This approach created a collaborative ecosystem where knowledge is shared, and solutions are co-developed. Students engaged in the project were not simply observers; they learned to identify social impact, ethics, and responsibility as core to the engineering design process. The work exemplifies human-centered engineering in practice, demonstrating how engineers can leverage expertise to bridge gaps in pertinent socio-political challenges.

 

Diamond, Monroe, and Olson’s project illustrates that engineering is more than tool-making: it is a force for systemic change. By transforming a confounding political and regulatory challenge into a solvable problem, they show that engineers can act as mediators between technical possibility, ethical responsibility, and public safety. Their work empowers the next generation of engineers to approach problems with curiosity and a commitment to creating safer, more just technologies.

 

Through their vision and rigor, this team has provided a model for Peace Engineering, showing how thoughtful design can anticipate harm, protect communities, and shape engineers to understand that the work they do today shapes the reality of tomorrow.

Note: The words of Emily Monroe, who nominated this project for the Constellation Prize, have been integrated into this write-up.

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