Debra Perrone, Affiliated Faculty

Affiliated Faculty

Address
Bren 4025
Research Areas
Water Resources Engineering, Groundwater Science and Policy
Instructor Code
41

Education

  • 2014 Ph.D., Environmental Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee
  • 2010 M.S., Environmental Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee
  • 2008 B.S., Civil and Environmental Engineering, Lafayette College, Easton, Pennsylvania

Bio

Debra Perrone is an Associate Professor of UCSB’s Environmental Studies Program. Prior to joining the faculty at the University of California, Debra was a postdoctoral research scholar at Stanford University with a dual appointment in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the Woods Institute for the Environment. She received her PhD in Environmental Engineering at Vanderbilt University in 2014 and was awarded first honors as the Graduate School’s Founder’s Medalist. Debra has been awarded fellowships from the Environmental Protection Agency and National Science Foundation for her work studying the growing water scarcity challenges and tradeoffs facing society. Deb integrates research methods from engineering, physical science, and law to inform water sustainability and policy; she uses a wide-spectrum of outlets to disseminate her research, including peer-reviewed journals, policy briefs, and interactive-online dashboards. Debra is a co-author of a textbook for undergraduate students that focuses on the challenges and opportunities surrounding our global water resources by providing a foundation in water science and policy. 

Publications

For a full list of publications, please visit Dr. Perrone's website.

PhD Candidates in Debra Perrone's Research Group

People

PhD Student

Research Areas:
Groundwater, data science, water law and policy

News about Debra Perrone

News

Widespread River Water Leakage into Aquifers Could Lead to Disappearing Streams

Through an unprecedented data-compilation project, Bren researchers reveal the extent to which rivers are losing water to underlying aquifers across the U.S.

Study Shows Americans are Drilling Deeper than Ever for Fresh Water

Researchers publish the first comprehensive account of groundwater wells across the contiguous United States

Fresh Groundwater May Be Less Abundant than Previously Thought

The US has less fresh groundwater than previously thought, according to research by UCSB scientists