
Rebecca Slayton, PhD
Visiting Scholar
CISAC
Stanford University
Encina Hall, C226
Stanford, Ca 94305-6165
Research Interests
Cold War; missile defense; nuclear weapons; defense policy; ethics;
Rebecca Slayton's Curriculum Vitae (191.5KB, modified October 2012)
Rebecca Slayton is a lecturer in Stanford’s Public Policy Program and a Visiting Scholar at CISAC. Her research examines how experts evaluate the prospects and risks of new technology, and how they make their judgments politically persuasive in the context of international security. She recently completed a book, Arguments that Count: Physics, Computing, and Missile Defense, 1949-2012, which will be published by MIT Press in 2013. Arguments that Counts compares how two different ways of framing technology—physics and computer science—lead to very different understandings of the risks associated with weapons systems, and especially missile defense. It also shows how computer scientists established a disciplinary repertoire—quantitative rules, codified knowledge, and other tools for assessment—that enabled them to analyze the risks of missile defense, and to make those analyses “stick” in the political process. She has recently begun studying how different cultures of risk have shaped, and continue to shape, the field of cyber security.
Slayton was a lecturer in the Science, Technology and Society Program at Stanford University and a CISAC affiliate from 2005-2011. In 2004-2005 she was a CISAC science fellow. She earned a PhD in physical chemistry at Harvard University in 2002. From 2002-2004, she retooled in the social sciences as a National Science Foundation postdoctoral fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She also won a AAAS Mass Media Science and Engineering Fellowship in 2000, and has worked as a science journalist.
Events & Presentations
The 5 most recent are displayed. More events & presentations »
Orbital Debris-Debris Collision Avoidance
March 31, 2011 Research Seminar
Jan M. Stupl, Rebecca Slayton
paper available
Programmers, Managers, and Defense Dollars: The Contrary Networking of "Software Engineering"
October 15, 2009 Research Seminar
Rebecca Slayton, Eric Roberts- Disrupting Science: Social Movements, American Scientists, and the Politics of the Military, 1945-1975
February 12, 2009 Social Science Seminar
Kelly Moore, Rebecca Slayton
paper available - Military Biodefense: A Casualty of Kinetic Warfare?
April 17, 2008 Social Science Seminar
Frank Smith, Rebecca Slayton - Showing off the Soviet State: How Public Representations of Nuclear Technologies Constructed Ideal Citizens
June 7, 2007 Social Science Seminar
Sonja Schmid, Rebecca Slayton



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