Description

Book Synopsis

The governing international space law regime has been locked in a norm-creation stalemate for over 40 years. This stalemate endangers the preservation of established, guiding legal principles, as well as the sustainability of the parts of outer space that humans utilize. The discrepancy between norm creation, technological advancement, and the ecosystem of novel actors could generate serious consequences for future space activities and the nature of international relations. Besides the return of old rivalries in a New Cold War, new activities and actors emerging amidst a legal void emphasizes the risks of the stalemate: unstable peace, fragile cooperation, uneven technological development, and uncertain eco-sustainability. The prolonged legal stalemate cannot be treated simply as an academic question, for it has broader political and economic implications of growing strategic relevance. Unresolved issues in international space law could threaten the survival of space as a global com

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Abbreviations

Introduction

1. Background

2. Main challenges

I Space law: historical and institutional background

1. The Cold War

1.1. United Nations: the prime body in international space norm creation

1.2. UN Committee on Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (UN COPUOS)

2. Space treaties’ creation

2.1. Space treaties

II The current state of the space domain

1. The rise of the private sector

2. The problem of legal ambiguity

3. New trends in regulating the space domain

3.1. The Cape Town Convention

3.2. Soft law

3.3. National space legislation

III The changing global context

1. Geopolitical transformations

1.1. The new space powers

1.2. The emerging space nations

2. Shift in the economic paradigm

3. Technological development: from military to civilian use

4. Multidirectional diplomacy

5. The lawmaking process itself

5.1. The norm-creation mechanism in the United Nations

5.2. The norm-creation mechanism in the Legal Subcommittee of the UN COPUOS

6. Conclusion

IV Necessity of new internationally binding norms in space law

1. Space activities outside of the current legal realm

1.1. Active debris removal

1.2. Resource utilization and extraction from celestial bodies

1.3. Human planetary exploration

2. Space actors outside of the current legal realm

3. Why is the stalemate dangerous?

4. State sovereignty in the area of globalization and interdependence

5. A legal obligation to cooperate: mandatory multilateralism

V Alternative ways of law-making

1. UN specialized agencies

1.1. International Telecommunication Union (ITU)

1.1.1. Short history

1.1.2. Purpose

1.1.3. Membership

1.1.4. Decision-making bodies

1.1.5. Norm mechanisms: constituent instrument and secondary norms

1.1.6. Implementation

1.2. International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO)

1.2.1. Short history

1.2.2. Purpose

1.2.3. Membership

1.2.4. Decision-making bodies

1.2.5. Norm mechanisms: constituent instrument and secondary norms

1.2.6. Implementation

2. International legal regimes that deal with international commons

2.1. The international legal regime for marine beyond national jurisdiction

2.1.1. Short history

2.1.2. Purpose

2.1.3. Membership

2.1.4. Decision-making bodies

2.1.5. Norm mechanism: constituent instrument and secondary norms

2.1.6. Implementation

2.2. The international legal regime for the Antarctic area

2.2.1. Short history

2.2.2. Purpose

2.2.3. Membership

2.2.4. Decision-making bodies

2.2.5. Norm mechanism: constituent instrument and secondary norms

2.2.6. Implementation

3. Regional space agencies

3.1. European Space Agency (ESA)

3.1.1. Short history

3.1.2. Purpose

3.1.3. Membership

3.1.4. Decision-making bodies

3.1.5. Norm mechanism: constituent instrument and secondary norm mechanism

3.1.6 Implementation

3.2. European Union Agency for the Space Program (EUSPA)

3.2.1. Short history

3.2.2. Purpose

3.2.3. Membership

3.2.4. Decision-making bodies

3.2.5. Norm mechanism: constituent instrument and secondary norm mechanism

3.2.6. Implementation provisions

VI Key findings and strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats analysis

1. Key findings

1.1. Hierarchy of norms

1.2. Decision-making organ

1.3. Possibility to make amendments

1.4. Voting mechanism

1.5. Possibility to make reservations/to opt out

2. Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats analysis

2.1. Strengths and opportunities

2.2. Weaknesses and potential threats

3. Proposed solutions

Conclusion

A. Bibliography

Index

The Space Law Stalemate

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A Paperback by Anja Pecujlic

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    View other formats and editions of The Space Law Stalemate by Anja Pecujlic

    Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
    Publication Date: 3/21/2023 12:00:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9781032300726, 978-1032300726
    ISBN10: 1032300728

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    The governing international space law regime has been locked in a norm-creation stalemate for over 40 years. This stalemate endangers the preservation of established, guiding legal principles, as well as the sustainability of the parts of outer space that humans utilize. The discrepancy between norm creation, technological advancement, and the ecosystem of novel actors could generate serious consequences for future space activities and the nature of international relations. Besides the return of old rivalries in a New Cold War, new activities and actors emerging amidst a legal void emphasizes the risks of the stalemate: unstable peace, fragile cooperation, uneven technological development, and uncertain eco-sustainability. The prolonged legal stalemate cannot be treated simply as an academic question, for it has broader political and economic implications of growing strategic relevance. Unresolved issues in international space law could threaten the survival of space as a global com

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgments

    Abbreviations

    Introduction

    1. Background

    2. Main challenges

    I Space law: historical and institutional background

    1. The Cold War

    1.1. United Nations: the prime body in international space norm creation

    1.2. UN Committee on Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (UN COPUOS)

    2. Space treaties’ creation

    2.1. Space treaties

    II The current state of the space domain

    1. The rise of the private sector

    2. The problem of legal ambiguity

    3. New trends in regulating the space domain

    3.1. The Cape Town Convention

    3.2. Soft law

    3.3. National space legislation

    III The changing global context

    1. Geopolitical transformations

    1.1. The new space powers

    1.2. The emerging space nations

    2. Shift in the economic paradigm

    3. Technological development: from military to civilian use

    4. Multidirectional diplomacy

    5. The lawmaking process itself

    5.1. The norm-creation mechanism in the United Nations

    5.2. The norm-creation mechanism in the Legal Subcommittee of the UN COPUOS

    6. Conclusion

    IV Necessity of new internationally binding norms in space law

    1. Space activities outside of the current legal realm

    1.1. Active debris removal

    1.2. Resource utilization and extraction from celestial bodies

    1.3. Human planetary exploration

    2. Space actors outside of the current legal realm

    3. Why is the stalemate dangerous?

    4. State sovereignty in the area of globalization and interdependence

    5. A legal obligation to cooperate: mandatory multilateralism

    V Alternative ways of law-making

    1. UN specialized agencies

    1.1. International Telecommunication Union (ITU)

    1.1.1. Short history

    1.1.2. Purpose

    1.1.3. Membership

    1.1.4. Decision-making bodies

    1.1.5. Norm mechanisms: constituent instrument and secondary norms

    1.1.6. Implementation

    1.2. International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO)

    1.2.1. Short history

    1.2.2. Purpose

    1.2.3. Membership

    1.2.4. Decision-making bodies

    1.2.5. Norm mechanisms: constituent instrument and secondary norms

    1.2.6. Implementation

    2. International legal regimes that deal with international commons

    2.1. The international legal regime for marine beyond national jurisdiction

    2.1.1. Short history

    2.1.2. Purpose

    2.1.3. Membership

    2.1.4. Decision-making bodies

    2.1.5. Norm mechanism: constituent instrument and secondary norms

    2.1.6. Implementation

    2.2. The international legal regime for the Antarctic area

    2.2.1. Short history

    2.2.2. Purpose

    2.2.3. Membership

    2.2.4. Decision-making bodies

    2.2.5. Norm mechanism: constituent instrument and secondary norms

    2.2.6. Implementation

    3. Regional space agencies

    3.1. European Space Agency (ESA)

    3.1.1. Short history

    3.1.2. Purpose

    3.1.3. Membership

    3.1.4. Decision-making bodies

    3.1.5. Norm mechanism: constituent instrument and secondary norm mechanism

    3.1.6 Implementation

    3.2. European Union Agency for the Space Program (EUSPA)

    3.2.1. Short history

    3.2.2. Purpose

    3.2.3. Membership

    3.2.4. Decision-making bodies

    3.2.5. Norm mechanism: constituent instrument and secondary norm mechanism

    3.2.6. Implementation provisions

    VI Key findings and strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats analysis

    1. Key findings

    1.1. Hierarchy of norms

    1.2. Decision-making organ

    1.3. Possibility to make amendments

    1.4. Voting mechanism

    1.5. Possibility to make reservations/to opt out

    2. Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats analysis

    2.1. Strengths and opportunities

    2.2. Weaknesses and potential threats

    3. Proposed solutions

    Conclusion

    A. Bibliography

    Index

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