The U.S. military has established resilience practices for domestic installations, and a number of different military organizations, such as the Air National Guard, are co-located at civilian airports. This situation provides opportunities for airports to learn from military resilience practices.
ACRP Synthesis 133: Identifying Military Resources and Strategies to Improve Civilian Airport Resiliency, from TRB's Airport Cooperative Research Program, documents resiliency practices and processes from the National Guard and other military services that airports can adapt and leverage for their own facilities and in partnerships with co-located military facilities.
National Research Council. 2024. Identifying Military Resources and Strategies to Improve Civilian Airport Resiliency. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/27453.
Chapters | skim | |
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Front Matter | i-viii | |
Summary | 1-3 | |
Chapter 1 - Introduction | 4-8 | |
Chapter 2 - State of the Practice | 9-37 | |
Chapter 3 - Resilient Structures | 38-42 | |
Chapter 4 - Management, Funding, and Third Parties | 43-57 | |
Chapter 5 - Case Examples | 58-64 | |
Chapter 6 - Conclusions | 65-67 | |
References | 68-72 | |
Bibliography | 73-73 | |
Abbreviations and Acronyms | 74-76 | |
Glossary | 77-81 | |
Appendix A - Resilience Artifacts and Workflows | 82-97 | |
Appendix B - Interview Guide | 98-98 | |
Appendix C - Interview Responses | 99-172 |
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