CISAC SCIENCE SEMINAR

Rebecca Slayton - Junior Faculty Fellow, CISAC

Information as Power: Risk Management, Cybersecurity, and the Electrical Power 
Grid  

DATE AND TIME

May 19, 2014
11:30 AM - 1:00 PM

AVAILABILITY

Open to the public
No RSVP required

ABSTRACT

In the United States (and in many other countries around the world), risk 
management has become the dominant paradigm for securing the electrical power 
grid from a cyberattack. Regulations require asset owners to use a risk 
assessment methodology to identify high-risk assets and apply certain security 
controls to them, but assets that are deemed “low-risk” are exempt. Industry 
groups also promote formal risk management for a cost-effective cybersecurity 
strategy. While formal risk management frameworks have proliferated in recent 
years, evidence suggests that there are significant shortcomings in the actual 
implementation of risk management. This talk examines what we know about how 
risks are being managed, both within individual organizations in the power 
sector, and by federal regulators in the United States. Using a risk management 
perspective, it surveys known threats, vulnerabilities, and consequences for a 
range of potential cyber attacks. It then shows that in the U.S., federal 
regulation currently organizes the risk management process in ways that 
overlook systemic risks. In conclusion, it discusses alternatives to risk 
management and directions for future research.

BIO

Rebecca Slayton is a lecturer in Stanford’s Public Policy Program and a junior 
faculty fellow at CISAC for 2013-2014. Her research examines how different 
kinds of experts assess the risks of new technology, and how their arguments 
gain influence in distinctive organizational and political contexts. She is 
currently studying efforts to manage the diverse risks—economic, environmental, 
and security—associated with a “smarter” electrical grid.

Slayton earned a PhD in physical chemistry at Harvard University in 2002. In 
2002 she won a National Science Foundation postdoctoral grant to study 
scientific advising and public debate about the “Star Wars” missile defense 
program, and to develop skills in social scientific research methods, in the 
Science, Technology, and Society Program 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.

LOCATION

CISAC Conference Room
Encina Hall Central, 2nd floor
616 Serra St.
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305

FSI CONTACT

Catherine McMillan <camcm...@stanford.edu>


http://fsi.stanford.edu/events/information_as_power_risk_management_cybersecurity_and_the_electrical_power_grid/
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