Rebecca Slayton

Rebecca Slayton

Rebecca Slayton, PhD

  • Affiliate

Biography

Slayton’s research and teaching examine the relationships between and among risk, governance, and expertise, with a focus on international security and cooperation since World War II. Slayton’s current book project, Shadowing Cybersecurity, examines the historical emergence of cybersecurity expertise. Shadowing Cybersecurity shows how efforts to establish credible expertise in corporate, governmental, and non-governmental contexts have produced varying and sometimes conflicting expert practices. Nonetheless, all cybersecurity experts wrestle with the irreducible uncertainties that characterize intelligent adversaries, and the fundamental inability to prove that systems are secure. The book shows how cybersecurity experts have paradoxically gained credibility by making threats and vulnerabilities visible, while acknowledging that more always remain in the shadows.

Slayton’s first book, Arguments that Count: Physics, Computing, and Missile Defense, 1949-2012 (MIT Press, 2013), shows how the rise of a new field of expertise in computing reshaped public policies and perceptions about the risks of missile defense in the United States. In 2015, Arguments that Count won the Computer History Museum Prize. In 2016, Slayton was awarded a National Science Foundation CAREER grant for her project “Enacting Cybersecurity Expertise.” In 2019, Slayton was also a recipient of the United States Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers, for her NSF CAREER project.

publications

Journal Articles
September 2017

Beyond regulatory capture: Coproducing expertise for critical infrastructure protection

Author(s)
cover link Beyond regulatory capture: Coproducing expertise for critical infrastructure protection
Journal Articles
December 2013

Efficient, Secure Green: Digital Utopianism and the Challenge of Making the Electrical Grid “Smart”

Author(s)
cover link Efficient, Secure Green: Digital Utopianism and the Challenge of Making the Electrical Grid “Smart”
Books
August 2013

Arguments that Count: Physics, Computing, and Missile Defense, 1949-2012

Author(s)
cover link Arguments that Count: Physics, Computing, and Missile Defense, 1949-2012