D
Drake E. Warren
Researcher at Sandia National Laboratories
Publications - 24
Citations - 802
Drake E. Warren is an academic researcher from Sandia National Laboratories. The author has contributed to research in topics: Resilience (network) & Economic impact analysis. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 23 publications receiving 661 citations.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
A resilience assessment framework for infrastructure and economic systems: Quantitative and qualitative resilience analysis of petrochemical supply chains to a hurricane
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a comprehensive resilience assessment framework for evaluating the resilience of infrastructure and economic systems and demonstrated the utility of the assessment framework through application to two hypothetical scenarios involving the disruption of a petrochemical supply chain by hurricanes.
Book ChapterDOI
A Framework for Assessing the Resilience of Infrastructure and Economic Systems
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a general framework for assessing the resilience of infrastructure and economic systems, which consists of three primary components: (1) a definition of resilience that is specific to infrastructure systems; (2) a quantitative model for measuring resilience of systems to disruptive events through the evaluation of both impacts to system performance and the cost of recovery; and (3) a qualitative method for assessing system properties that inherently determine system resilience.
Journal ArticleDOI
Why some rural places prosper and others do not
TL;DR: More than 300 rural counties are more prosperous than the entire United States as mentioned in this paper and each has lower unemployment rates, lower poverty rates, and lower school dropout rates than the rest of the country.
Book
Critical Infrastructure System Security and Resiliency
TL;DR: This book provides a high-level, practical analytical framework that public and private sector owners and operators of critical infrastructure can use to better understand and evaluate infrastructure security strategies and policies.
ReportDOI
Assessing the Near-Term Risk of Climate Uncertainty:Interdependencies among the U.S. States.
Rhonda K. Reinert,Kevin Louis Stamber,David B. Robinson,George A. Backus,William Fogelman,Laura Cutler,Mark Bruce Elrick Boslough,Ray Finely,John Siirola,Thomas Stephen Lowry,John Lovorn Mitchiner,Stephen H. Conrad,Andjelka Kelic,Geoffrey Taylor Klise,James Hassler Strickland,Anna Neila Weddington,Drake E. Warren,Mark A. Taylor,Verne W. Loose,Elizabeth H. Richards,Vincent C. Tidwell,Daniel S. Horschel,Vanessa N. Vargas,Mark Andrew Ehlen,Lillian Annabelle Snyder,William Anthony Stubblefield,Aldo A. Zagonel,Marissa Devan Reno,Timothy G. Trucano,Leonard A. Malczynski,Jesse Dillon Roach,Arnold B. Baker,Brian M. Adams +32 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the impacts of climate change on U.S. state and national-level economic activity from 2010 to 2050 are estimated. But they focus on precipitation, one of the most uncertain aspects of future climate change.