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Suggested Citation:"References." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2023. Developing a Highway Framework to Conduct an All-Hazards Risk and Resilience Analysis. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26924.
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Page 31
Page 32
Suggested Citation:"References." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2023. Developing a Highway Framework to Conduct an All-Hazards Risk and Resilience Analysis. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/26924.
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Page 32

Below is the uncorrected machine-read text of this chapter, intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text of each book. Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.

31   References Bruneau, M., and Reinhorn, A. (2006). Overview of the Resilience Concept. National Conference on Earthquake Engineering. San Francisco. D’Ayala, D., Sun, L., Fayjaloun, R., and Gehl, P. (2021). Agent-Based Model on Resilience-Oriented Rapid Responses of Road Networks under Seismic Hazard. Reliability Engineering & System Safety. Volume 216. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S095183202100538X. Markolf, S., Hoehne, C., Fraser, A., Chester, M., and Underwood, B. S. (n.d.). Transportation Resilience to Climate Change and Extreme Weather Events—Beyond Risk and Robustness. Retrieved from https://www. sciencedirect. com/science/article/pii/S0967070X17305000.

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 Developing a Highway Framework to Conduct an All-Hazards Risk and Resilience Analysis
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Transportation agencies currently have to meet federal regulations that require the incorporation of risk and resilience into their activities, including MAP-21, FHWA 5520, and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. However, guidelines for analytical risk assessment methods to support risk-based processes is lagging.

The TRB National Cooperative Highway Research Program's NCHRP Research Report 1014: Developing a Highway Framework to Conduct an All-Hazards Risk and Resilience Analysis presents a research roadmap to develop a comprehensive manual, tools, training, and implementation guidelines for quantitative risk and resilience assessment that satisfies new federal requirements.

Supplemental to the report are an implementation and communications plan, a flyer summarizing the project, and a PowerPoint presentation.

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