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Contested Logistics Consortium

at the University of Arkansas

What is Contested Logistics?

In plain terms, forecast what the warfighter needs, plan how to get it there, source the materials, produce the goods, and deliver fuel, ammunition, food, parts, and medical support to the fight, while the enemy tries to break every link in that chain.

Our Purpose in Contested Logistics

The logistics systems built for permissive environments will not survive contested, multi-domain conflict. The Contested Logistics Consortium exists to help close that gap. We bring together defense practitioners, industry partners, and academic researchers to produce actionable research, develop operationally grounded talent, and build the sustained partnerships the joint force needs. Our work is rooted in one of the nation's leading supply chain programs, embedded in the nation's 'Silicon Valley of logistics,' and aimed at the hardest logistics problems the threats now emerging demand.

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CLC Insights

Our Contested Logistics Insights

Our Contested Logistics Insights draw on rigorous academic research, commercial supply chain expertise, and original thought leadership to address the operational realities faced by defense leaders. Each piece reframes proven concepts through a contested lens—grounded in real-world challenges and designed to inform more resilient, adaptive decision-making. Together, these insights reinforce the University of Arkansas as a leading voice in contested logistics. Read more articles from our archive HERE.

 
https://walton.uark.edu/initiatives/supply-chain-research/posts/images/alex_scmrc_12_913x485_72dpi.jpg

Seeing Without Being Seen

This paper examines asset visibility as a priority domain in contested sustainment, tracing the commercial innovations the Army drew from and the capabilities it built to maintain situational awareness without illuminating itself to the adversary.

05/11/2026 | By Alex Solis

https://walton.uark.edu/initiatives/supply-chain-research/posts/images/brian_scmrc_11_913x485_72dpi.jpg

Contested Logistics: Built for Efficiency, Tested by War

In March 2023, the Marine Corps rewrote its logistics doctrine for the first time in 26 years. Marines must ship and fight at the same time, whether on land, sea, air, space, or cyber. No staging time. No safe ports. The fight has changed. Has the supply chain changed with it?

05/11/2026 | By Brian Fugate

https://walton.uark.edu/initiatives/supply-chain-research/posts/images/alex_scmrc_8_913x485_72dpi.jpg

How the Army Transformed Contested Logistics

Find out how the U.S. Army is reinventing the way it fights when supply lines are no longer safe, and what cutting-edge innovations are turning logistics from a vulnerability into a battlefield advantage.

03/27/2026 | By Alex Solis

 
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Who We Are

The Contested Logistics Consortium draws on more than 30 faculty across supply chain management, industrial engineering, and information systems at the University of Arkansas. Our researchers span network optimization, reliability engineering, human-machine teaming, cybersecurity, AI-enabled decision support, and transportation resilience, covering the full range of capabilities contested logistics demands, from sustainment modeling to autonomous systems governance.