Advanced search Help
Searching for terms: EXACT: "United States Air Force Academy" in: publisher
Clear all search criteria
Only 2/3! You are seeing results from the Public Collection, not the complete Full Collection. Sign in to search everything (see eligibility).
-
JSCOPE 2001: A Joint Services Conference on Professional Ethics: The Domestic Role of the Military [website]
The Joint Services Conference on Professional Ethics (JSCOPE 2001) lists the papers presented at the JSCOPE conference on the Domestic Role of the Military.
United States Air Force Academy
-
NATO: Potential Sources of Tension
Throughout the beginning of 1999, NATO has experienced a period of relative internal calm. NATO is threatened neither by a powerful external threat nor by overarching internal strategic differences, and enjoys a degree of support that may indeed be higher than during the Cold War. Nevertheless, there are potential sources of strain and tension within the Alliance. Such strains collectively could introduce more serious tensions, especially with the imposition of other, unanticipated kinds of tension or crisis. Several long term tensions that existed during the Cold War continue to affect NATO today. These include geography as it affects how an Ally perceives its own interests, French exception and interpretation of its national independence, and the real purpose of the Alliance. Short and medium term issues include: (1) enlargement; (2) strategic concept review; (3) cost issues; (4) European Security and Defense Identity (ESDI); (5) counter proliferation and terrorism; (6) U.S. technology gap; (7) adaptation issues; (8) Greece and Turkey; and the (9) Balkans.
United States Air Force Academy
Wood, Joseph R.
1999-02
-
Workshop Proceedings for USAF Institute for National Security Studies: Combatting Fissile Materials Smuggling Workshop #5, Held in Dublin, California, 3-4 February 1998
In February 1998, the Air Force INSS sponsored the fifth workshop entitled, Combatting Fissile Material Smuggling. This Workshop permitted more than 60 representatives from government, academic, and private industry to exchange information regarding the status of fissile material smuggling: evaluation of the severity of the threat and apparent lull in activity, discussion of domestic programs designed to prevent or counter fissile material smuggling, technical aspects of the prevention of nuclear smuggling, international cooperation and training to deter nuclear smuggling, and response programs. A key element in the successful defense against nuclear smuggling is international cooperation. The relative balance between threats resulting from terrorist groups and rogue nations using nuclear weapons vs. biological chemical weapons was debated, and one conclusion was that sufficient attention has not yet been paid to the biological threat.
United States Air Force Academy
Richardson, Jeffery H.
1999-02
-
Security Implications of the Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) in the Middle East
This paper concerns the underlying dynamic of the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in the Middle East. It will seek to explain the quest to proliferation in terms of the interconnectivity and the region, the motivations of the major regional powers, and local perceptions as to the nature of security threats. Finally, the paper will discuss the implications of proliferation for U.S. policy toward the region that may require a shift in that policy.
United States Air Force Academy
Hajjar, Sami G., 1939-
1998-12-17
-
Countering the Proliferation and Use of Weapons of Mass Destruction
The USAF Institute for National Security Studies, in cooperation with HQ USAF Nuclear and Counter proliferation Directorate, sponsored it, 5th annual Tropical Conference, entitled Countering the Proliferation and Use of Weapons of Mass Destruction held on 29-30 July 1997 at the National Defense University. The purpose of this conference was to examine emerging asymmetric strategies an capabilities made Counter proliferation increasingly more difficult for the United States, Major Gen. Neary said: This, the United States Air Force, under Gen. Ronald Fogleman's guidance, adopted a new structure to counter the proliferation of WMD.
United States Air Force Academy
1997-07-30
-
Air Force Smart Bases
"Integrating the Internet of Things (IoT) into the workplace is as simple or as complicated as we make it. Single devices find their way into facilities to meet minor functional needs such as turning lights on when someone enters a room or monitoring energy usage by a squadron or department. Technical and policy complexity is increased when wearable devices are added to the mix to grant quick and seamless access through security gates, automatically log into computers, reduce insider cyber threats to information or critical infrastructure, or monitor an Airman's physical fitness, diet or vital signs as a way of improving the health of the force. [...] Air Force CyberWorx was tasked with gathering a team of government and industry partners to conduct a design sprint to lay out a unified path forward for the AF [Air Force] to enable better experimentation and unity of efforts moving toward the future. Then to design an information and data architecture to enable many use cases for further mission experimentation and acquisition strategy development."
United States Air Force Academy
Chiaramonte, Michael D.; Veigel, Jennifer V.; Collins, Jeffrey A.
2017-10-19?
-
Ethics in Complex Contingencies: New Demands on the Warrior Ethic
"Soldiers searching for insurgents knocked on an apartment door where they were told loyalists of Saddam Hussein were hiding. They yelled out in English and Arabic US Army, open the door! After a few minutes they heard a shot come from the apartment. In the confusion it was not clear if it was aimed at them or not...After the dust cleared, they found they had killed a teen-age girl and her father, who fired the shot because he thought criminals were at the door. It is not the purpose of this paper to second-guess hard decisions made by military professionals in the heat of battle. However, situations like the one described above make the warrior ethic, by which soldiers make and judge these decisions, seem inadequate. Given the ethics of the military profession arguably these soldiers did nothing wrong. Civilian deaths in war are legally and morally permissible. But what troubles some about this example is that the family in question had survived the major combat operations and was going about the business of reconstructing their lives in post-Saddam Iraq. While all death in war is tragic, deaths of noncombatants after a war is apparently over seem especially so and undermine the ideal of a just and stable Iraq for which soldiers are ostensibly fighting."
United States Air Force Academy
Pfaff, Tony
2004-01
-
When the War Doesn't End: Detainees in Legal Limbo
From the abstract: "War on terror legislation still has the power to allow U.S. and foreign citizens to be detained anywhere, and to be held indefinitely. On April 25, the U.S. Supreme Court decided not to review 'Hedges v. Obama,' a case that challenged the judicial precedence on which such security detentions are based. The authors argue that holding indefinitely those with no proven link to terrorism put s the security of U.S. citizens at risk and compromises U.S. leadership. First, in a war with no foreseeable end, such a policy puts the United States in the position of detaining and holding persons for decades. This practice is impractical and legally questionable. Second, it jeopardizes relationships with allies who can assist America in responding to terrorism. Third, such policies have left a lack of legal clarity for how detainees should be treated while they are waiting to be charged or released. Fourth, the policy is costly for the U.S. military and diverts funds and focus from other national security priorities. The military and Congress have put helpful accountability mechanisms in place to ensure that indefinite detention will end. As long as the judicial precedent for indefinite detentions and the war on terror legislation is allowed to stand, however, detainees remain in legal limbo."
United States Air Force Academy
Lohmann, Sarah; Austin, Chad
2014-05-08
-
Worried Well: Strategies for Installation Commanders
The author examines how installation commanders can best use media and public affairs strategies to decrease fear among people during a crisis. The author refers to the level of concern and fear among people as the worried well.
United States Air Force Academy
Pilch, Fran
2004
-
Arab Perception and Consensus Problems: Implications for US Policy in the Middle East
"This paper is a preliminary effort to assess Middle Eastern perceptions of the US and the resulting effect on US foreign policy in the region. My effort follows a three part outline: a) Arab perceptions of the US; b) how a lack of consensus within the civil polity, especially the relationship between governments and Islamic forces, impedes progress in the various states of the Arab world and
contributes to misperception; and c) US policy recommendations and conclusions." This paper is part of a larger document entitled "View from the East: Arab Perceptions of United States Presence and Policy".
United States Air Force Academy
Talbot, Brent J.
2003-02
-
Homeland Security and Civil Liberties: A Pluralistic Approach
This paper argues that we need to develop a new, pluralistic framework for evaluating the use of force in homeland security activities, and shows how such a framework might function, using ethnic profiling as an example. In support of this claim, the author argues that Just War Theory, the main moral framework for evaluating the use of force, is not adequate for evaluating the use of force in homeland security activities, and that existing regulations governing the use of force by soldiers and police officers are also not adequate for this purpose. The paper then presents a framework that is pluralistic, in that it is not based upon a single moral theory and in that it acknowledges multiple incommensurable criteria for evaluating the use of force in homeland security activities rather than seeking to evaluate all such activities using a single criterion or a single formula that tells how to prioritize these criteria. Finally, the paper presents an example of how such a pluralistic moral framework can provide guidance to homeland security professionals without preventing them from exercising their own professional judgment, using the issue of ethnic profiling of persons of Arab descent or appearance at airport security checkpoints. The paper concludes that a pluralistic moral framework is both more theoretically sound and more practically applicable than existing moral frameworks, or than any new monistic moral framework could be.
United States Air Force Academy
Wingrove-Haugland, Erik
-
Defense Planning and Southern Cone Economic and Political Reform: Chilean and Argentine Air Force Acquisition Policies
This paper looks at recent Chilean and Argentine air force policies. Chile's Air Force (FACH) has become perhaps the region's most capable air force. Its budgets have declined recently, but less than those of the neighboring air forces. Acquisition funds are independent of the regular budget and not subject to congressional oversight. The FACH now wants to buy a squadron of fourth generation fighter aircraft. Argentina had done little to recapitalize its armed forces since the end of military rule. This has weakened its Air Force (FAA). It shows no interest in reordering priorities to upgrade FAA capabilities. None of this threatens war, but if poorly managed this asymmetry could undercut closer cooperation. Chile and Argentina should pursue transparency in military policy making, operations, budgeting, and acquisitions. To not do so risks slowing integration and the resolution of pending disputes. The U.S. cannot set a ceiling on aviation technology flowing to the region. Instead of trying to artificially limit supply of military aircraft, interested governments should focus political and diplomatic energies on building regional, political, economic, and military stability. They can promote multilateral service to service contacts and military power in assuring regional security.
United States Air Force Academy
O'Reilly, Kevin Michael
1997-09-30
-
Best Practices in User Needs/ Requirements Generation
"A process framework for the front-end of product development was developed. The framework covers the process space from an initial need (or recognition of need) to the decision for a product/development program launch. The framework focuses on the activities required for the development of requirements needed for an investment decision. The framework was developed through a thorough examination of the literature relating to product development and addresses not only the activities required to traverse the front-end, but also metrics and a process maturity matrix by which an organization can be evaluated. Using case studies of the front-end processes of eight commercial organizations and eight military organizations in addition to the US Air Force, the framework was tested. All of the organizations demonstrated the existence of the four fundamental activities contained in the framework but an examination of the existing process enablers revealed various interpretations of required features. The maturity matrix was used to evaluate each of the organizations (commercial and military) relative to the front-end process in the framework. The analysis revealed a significant gap between commercial and military process performance. The existence and application of the process enablers was significantly correlated with the organization's performance in the four process activities of the framework. The implications of the research indicate that military organizations need to reevaluate their current practices in the front-end and the application of process enablers within their organizations. Further, military organizations should reexamine if the current process structure for system development in the front-end need significant changes."
United States Air Force Academy
Wirthlin, Joseph R.
-
How Do Environmental Issues Contribute to Regional Instability? and Which Regions Will Pose the Greatest Threat to U.S. Security as a Result of Environmental Degradation?
"Environmental Security is a hot topic throughout the world. It has been researched and discussed in papers and articles. However, it has yet to be applied to regional instability beyond discussion within the National Security Strategy. The purpose of this paper is to define 'Environmental Security' and apply the definition to two regions of the world and try to identify the environmental factors that pose the greatest threats to U.S. security. The primary objective of this research is to determine and define how environmental issues contribute to regional political, economic or physical instability and then apply this definition to the regions of the world. Environmental issues are not contained by national boundaries, hence, we will focus on the two contrasting pictures of regional instability as influenced by environmental issues. Competition for natural resources and environmental degradation pose a risk to national security and regional stability in the Middle east. However, in Southeastern Asia environmental crises have instigated regional cooperation and enhanced regional stability. As this paper will demonstrate, the effect of environmental issues on regional security is dependent on the disposition of the players."
United States Air Force Academy
Casebeer, William D.; Brown, Casey; Schantz, Blair A.
-
Russia's Role in the Emerging Eurasian Security Environment
From the overview: "Russian foreign policy has taken an interesting turn during the administration of President Vladimir Putin. Following the proposed deployment of a strategic ballistic missile defense system in Central Europe, Mr. Putin threatened withdrawal from both the Conventional Forces Europe (CFE) and Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty in addition to retargeting nuclear missiles to Poland and the United States. Beyond rhetoric, concrete acts of Russian aggression include attempting to claim resource rich elements of the Arctic region, resuming bomber patrols, and invading Georgian airspace culminating in the invasion of Georgia itself. While these seemingly hostile acts are occurring, a great deal of cooperation exists between the United States and Russia in the US-led global war on terrorism. On other fronts, such as relations with the Chinese and Iranian nuclear ambitions, Russian policies seem much more ambivalent and even contradictory. […] It is the thesis of this project that Russian foreign policy is best understood through an understanding of Russian domestic politics and the dominant interests that supports Mr. Putin's policies: the military, the oligarchs, the Russian popular nationalist imperative and Putin's political machine itself. This paper will begin with an overview of basic Russian strategic thinking, but will probe more into the construction of Russian ideas and how those ideas have been made manifest within the Russian political system."
United States Air Force Academy
Sacko, David H.
2008
-
Chinese Attitudes on Preventive War and the 'Preemption Doctrine'
"With the release of President Bush's first National Security Strategy (NSS) in September 2002, the administration articulated a bold claim about the use of military force that had been crystallizing in American strategic circles over the previous decade. According to a central element in the emerging Bush Doctrine,' launching attacks against so-called rogue states suspected of pursuing weapons of mass destruction was a normatively legitimate and strategically necessary response to the changing threat environment. While the Bush administration used the language of preemption to characterize this policy option, the logic of using force under these circumstances was drawn directly from the concept of preventive war. Preventive war has a long-standing history in the modern state system, emerging from one of the most important dynamics of international politics -- the power shift problem. […] Building on this question, this paper examines attitudes on preventive war in the case of the Peoples Republic of China. Specifically it asks how Chinese elites -- government officials and academics -- view preventive war in the wake of American efforts to recast the preventive war norm and the invasion of Iraq."
United States Air Force Academy
Silverstone, Scott A.
2009-07
-
AFAFD Standard Operating Procedure 12: Personnel Accountability System
This document contains standard operating procedures for the United States Air Force Academy's Fire & Emergency Services: "The Personnel Accountability System (PAS) will be used to specifically identify and keep track of members operating at an emergency scene."
United States Air Force Academy
2004-01
-
Automated Vehicle Location using Global Positioning Systems for First Responders
This paper summarizes automatic vehicle location project conducted by members of the Air Force Academy Geospatial Technical Center (under the direction of the Institute for Information Technology) in collaboration with the Colorado Springs Traffic Management Center, AF Space Command, USAFA Fire Department and the 10th Communications Squadron during the summer of 2005.
United States Air Force Academy
Portillo, David
2008-02
-
U.S., Chinese, and Russian Perspectives on the Global Order
"Since the end of the cold war and the unexpected collapse of the bipolar world order, scholars and policymakers have attempted to understand the contours of an emerging order. As early as 1989, Francis Fukuyama predicted the end of history, a world where liberal democracy reigned supreme without serious ideological challengers. U.S. president George H. W. [Herbert Walker] Bush proclaimed a 'new world order' in 1991, 'where diverse nations are drawn together in common cause to achieve the universal aspirations of mankind--peace and security, freedom, and the rule of law.' However, Fukuyama's onetime mentor Samuel Huntington foresaw a very different structure, a clash of civilizations where frequent wars would be fought along civilizational fault lines. By the mid-1990s many observers noted a unipolar world structure dominated by the United States, although debate revolved around how long this unipolar structure would last.1 For instance, French Foreign Minister Hubert Vedrine described the United States as a 'hyperpower,' meaning 'a country that is dominant or predominant in all categories,' and thus a country whose unilateral tendencies in his view needed to be balanced."
United States Air Force Academy
Bolt, Paul J.
2015-01-01?
-
Airman Scholar Journal, Volume 15 [Fall 2010]
This Fall 2010 edition of Airman Scholar Journal published by the Air Force Academy includes the following articles: "How Can The Department Of Defense Promote Its Own Energy Independence?" by Tyler Haugseth; "Nuclear Consequence Management: How the US Should Respond to a Nuclear Attack by a Non- State Actor" by Joel Holley; "An Army of Lawrences" by William C. Kirk III.; "Terrorism and Technology" by Andrew Smith and Aaron Widener; "New Forms of Warfare: What's Changing, What's Not, and How Might Military Education Adapt ?" by Thoman A. Drohan; "Ancient Alexandria, Alexander, and History: The Relevance of Thought in the Contemporary Strategic Environment" by Steve Pomeroy.
United States Air Force Academy
2010
-
Research at USAFA 2011
"The falcon is not just the feathered mascot of the U.S. Air Force Academy (USAFA). Known as a symbol of singlemindedness, prowess, and of readiness to serve, the falcon is synonymous with all of the critical values of this institution's fundamental mission to educate, train, and inspire men and women to become officers of character motivated to lead the United States Air Force in service to our nation. The symbolism of the falcon has not only led us to success on the athletic field, but it has led generations of officers through rigorous academic challenges, decorated careers of service, and guided heart-felt outreach to the communities served by Airmen around the globe. The skills the falcon represents farsightedness, aerodynamic execution, efficiency, and discipline are ingrained into cadets educational and military experiences. The result is a cadre of officers with character, critical thinking skills, and visionary leadership; which on today's complex battlefields, will help them to anticipate and respond to evolving missions in air, space, and cyberspace; to emerging, game-changing technologies; and to new forms of asymmetrical warfare. With more than a $70 million annual budget, the U.S. Air Force Academy's sponsored research program is on the front-lines of this evolution. Representing 18 research centers and two Air Force institutes, cadets have a diverse choice of research opportunities. In addition to the centers and institutes within the Dean of Faculty, cadets also benefit from the research efforts within the USAFA Center for Character and Leadership Development, under the Commandant of Cadets, and the USAF Academy's Human Performance Lab in the Department of Athletics. The newly established K-12 STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) Outreach Center is dedicated to providing support for vetted STEM programs in and after school, continuing education opportunities for educators, and via regional partnerships."
United States Air Force Academy
2011
-
Holistic Operational Framework for Establishing Situational Awareness in Cyberspace
"Our nation, including the Department of Defense, relies heavily on information systems and networking technologies to efficiently conduct a wide variety of missions across the globe. With the ever-increasing rate of cyber attacks, this dependency places the nation at risk of a loss of confidentiality, integrity, and availability of its critical information resources; degrading its ability to complete the mission. In this paper, we propose a Holistic Operational Framework for Establishing Situational Awareness in Cyberspace (HOFESAC), whose goal is to provide the nation's leadership timely and accurate in formation to gain an understanding of the operational cyber environment to enable strategic , operational, and tactical decision making. In doing so, we present the key information components of cyber situational awareness and present a hypothetical case study demonstrating how they must be consolidated to provide a clear and relevant picture to a commander. In addition, current organizational and technical challenges are discussed, and areas for future research are addressed."
United States Air Force Academy
Dressler, Judson; Moody, William C.; Koepke, Jason . . .
2012-02-24?
-
Future of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
"In February 2014, I attended a conference at the pentagon that brought together academics, defense contractors, and military practitioners to discuss the future of small RPAs [Remotely Piloted Aircraft]. Many of the attendees had an untempered enthusiasm for the future of RPAs. [...] From the military perspective, miniature UAVs [Unmanned Aerial Vehicle] would be used to 'swarm' the enemy's air defense system. These predictions largely focus on technological early adopters who will use RPAs simply because they exist and are economically feasible. These arguments are based on the presumptive logic that because a technology is (or will be) developed and could fulfill a function, it will be used for that function. This article uses innovation theory to critically analyze the likely future of UAVs using a framework of expected benefits and costs of adoption."
United States Air Force Academy
Fowler, Michael W., 1971-
2014-11-15
-
Case for an ABET Accredited Computer and Network Security Program
From the abstract: "Cyber security is a losing battle. Faced with the challenge of always being right, network defenders and secure systems developers are constantly being overwhelmed with attacks by nation states, criminal organizations and other hackers. This paper outlines the need for security academic programs as a means of meeting the nations need for personnel with deep understanding of cyber security spanning from hardware, software, and advanced technologies to risk mitigation, decision strategies, law, ethics and policy. This paper advocates for a multi-discipline ABET [Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology] program accreditation to facilitate workforce hires, and skillset-job matching with a greater degree fidelity."
United States Air Force Academy
Chiaramonte, Michael D.; Caswell, David; Schechtman, Gregory
2014-06
-
U.S. Policy and the Libyan Dilemma
"In the past few months, Egypt, Libya, and other North African and Middle Eastern states have come into the spotlight in international politics. Seemingly contagious social uprisings demanding government overhaul are springing up with the hope of bringing about the process of democratization. The African continent may be experiencing the beginning of a pivotal stage in its history, and the importance of how the United States handles this transformation cannot be underestimated. Renewed and revitalized African governments offer the United States a chance to renew and revitalize its relationship with these governments, which in some cases, is a much needed renewal. Today, Libya offers the United States one of the most complex set of conditions to which diplomats have to respond. In order to fully appreciate the complexity and potential at stake, a short summary of the history of U.S.-Libya relations is in order, including the role of Muammar Gaddafi in this relationship. Next, the potential of the region will be discussed, and why it should be so important to the United States. Lastly, the author will address how the United States ought to treat the current situation in Libya."
United States Air Force Academy
Sikkema, Paul
2011
-
Dismantling Terrorism: Developing Actionable Solutions for Today's Plague of Violence
"This Special Bibliography Series, Number 108, ―Dismantling Terrorism: Developing Actionable Solutions for Today's Plague of Violence‖ was developed by the McDermott Library's Social Sciences Bibliographer and Reference Librarian, Frances K. Scott, in support of the 50th annual Academy Assembly to be held at the United States Air Force Academy, 5 -- 8 February 2008. Within this year's topic the bibliography begins with: The Causes--origins, definitions, and ideologies; followed by The Distribution--violence and its spread; The Financing--public support, state support, and economics; The Groups and Networks; The Psychology--mental, threats, human rights; The Prevention; The Remedies--understandings, fixes, responses, reactions, and finally, The Violence--suicide bombers, and other methods."
United States Air Force Academy. Library
2007-11
-
US-Canada Relations: Bridging the Common Border
"This Special Bibliography Series, Number 105, 'US-Canada Relations: Bridging the Common Border,' was developed by Social Sciences Bibliographer and Reference Librarian Frances K. Scott in support of the 48th annual Academy Assembly to be held at the Air Force Academy, 7 - 10 February 2006. Each year, beginning in 1959, the Air Force Academy sponsors the Academy Assembly as a forum for college students to discuss contemporary public issues. In support of that effort, the McDermott Library develops a bibliography of books and journal articles focusing on the current year's topic. In order to help participants have a common basis for the discussions, a new section is added this year, 'Assembly Director's Picks,' which provides a highly selected list of books and articles that each participant may wish to review prior to attending the Assembly. The call number listed at the end of each citation is typically the call number assigned by the Library of Congress, which most librairies use when adding books to their collections."
United States Air Force Academy. Library
Scott, Frances K.
2005-10
-
America's Challenges in an Unstable World: Balancing Security with Liberty
In support of the Academy Assembly, the Directorate of Libraries produces a special bibliography of Air Force Academy library materials relevant to the currant year's theme. The theme for the 2002/2003 academic year is: America's Challenges in an Unstable World: Balancing Security with Liberty. This year's bibliography. number 100 in the library's Special bibliography Series, was prepared by Frances K. Scott Social Sciences Bibliographer and Reference Librarian.
United States Air Force Academy. Library
Scott, Frances K.
2002-10
-
In Defense of Freedom: Protection of Human Rights at Home and Abroad
"This Special Bibliography Series, Number 111 , In Defense of Freedom: Protection of Human Rights at Home and Abroad, was developed by Social Sciences Bibliographer and Reference Librarian Frances K. Scott in support of the 52nd annual Academy Assembly to be held at the Air Force Academy, 19-22 October 2010. Each year, beginning in 1959, the Air Force Academy sponsors the Academy Assembly as a forum for college students to discuss contemporary public issues. In support of that effort, the McDermott Library develops a bibliography of books and journal articles focusing on the current year's topic. To help participants have a common basis for the discussions, the Assembly Director, Maj David M. Ware, USAF [US Air Force], has selected a list of books and articles that each participant may wish to review prior to attending the Assembly. The call number listed at the end of each citation is typically the call number assigned by the Library of Congress, which most libraries use when adding books to their collections. The bibliography is divided into the following sections: (1) Director's Picks, (2) Human Rights General Regions, (3) Global General Topics, (4) U.S. Domestic Issues, (5) Latin America and South America, (6) Eastern Europe (including Russia), (7) East Asia, (8) Southeast Asia and Southwest Asia, (9) Middle East and Northern Africa, (10) Subsaharan Africa and Southern Africa, (11) References, and (12) Web Sites."
United States Air Force Academy. Library
Scott, Frances K.
2010-10
-
Air Force Cyberworx Report 16-003: A Responsive Cyber Risk Ecosystem
"CyberWorx is a dynamic organization partnering Airmen, industry, and academia to reimagine how technology might enrich and protect our nation, businesses, and lives. As a human-centric design center, we seek out unique ways to connect Air Force warfighters with current and future technology in meaningful ways. We look to transfer, license, and share promising prototypes, solutions, and knowledge with our partners to create value for both the warfighter and the economy as this is the best way toward operational advantage. [...] Air Force CyberWorx offers facilitated design thinking sessions that bring stakeholders, industry and academic experts together to develop solutions to hard problems. These sessions are tailored to best meet AF needs with differing lengths based on time sensitivity and CyberWorx capacity. [...] The design project brought industry expertise to cadets and active duty operators; those differing perspectives provided unique value distinct from military members and government civilians."
United States Air Force Academy. CyberWorx
Chiaramonte, Michael D.; Collins, Jeffrey A.
2016