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Crime, Criminal Justice and Ethics in Outer Space: International Perspectives

Edited by: Yarin Eski, Jack Lampkin

ISBN13: 9781032567907
To be Published: November 2024
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £135.00



Breaking new ground in criminology, this book reflects on the expansion of outer space endeavours, the new pathways this presents for crime, challenges to Earth-based conceptions of justice, and the ethical issues raised.

This book is the first edited collection of chapters focused on how to prepare for, address and respond to, instances of criminal and harmful behaviour in (and related to) outer space. It also considers what criminal justice might look like in outer space, and how the important arena of ethics might help play a pivotal role in helping overcome problems related to crime and crime control. The book comprises twenty-six chapters from authors spanning six continents, giving a truly international dimension to the first anthology relating to the intersection of space criminology, space criminal justice and space ethics. It is this international dimension that is essential to the development of a holistic understanding of crime, criminal justice and ethics in outer space.

Exploring recent topics, including the dark origin of space exploration, expansion of satellite industries, space tourism, asteroid mining, and human-settlement on the Moon and Mars, the book will appeal to space professionals, and students and researchers working in criminology, critical security studies, law, and ethics.

Subjects:
Criminal Law, Air and Space Law
Contents:
Introduction – Exploring the Final Frontier of Criminology, Criminal Justice and Ethics Scholars Together in Outer Space
Yarin Eski & Jack Lampkin
1. Scientific Crimes Against Humanity for all Humankind: Accounting for the Space Legacy of Aryan Criminology and Nazi Aerospace Science
Yarin Eski
2. What on Earth is Happening in Outer Space? Questioning the Space Oligarchy
Rob White
3. Imagining Space Crime: Using Virtual Reality to Advance our Understanding of Space Crime
Iris van Sintemaartensdijk
4. Resource Exploitation in Outer Space: The Potential of Crime Scripting as a Prevention Tool for Environmental Space Crime
Emilia Ziosi
5. Cynical Actors in the Age of Transparency: Illegal Warfare and State Propaganda in a Glass House
Bruno Reynaud de Sousa
6. A Space Brutality: Satellite-Enabled Perpetration of Mass Image-Based Sexual Violence
Valérie Pijlman
7. Space Victimology: Out of the Dark and into the Light
Jack Lampkin
8. Connecting the Analogue Dots: Insights into the Future of Space Crime, Criminal Justice, and Ethics Now
Rebecca Kaiser
9. “If there was an observer on Mars, they would probably be amazed that we have survived this long:” Environmental Decline, Elite Escapes, and Space Colonies
Anita Lam, Nigel South & Avi Brisman
10. Harnessing Science Fiction to Reimagine Criminal Justice in Space: Opportunities and Risks
Erika Nesvold
11. Defining Space Debris Policy: A Perspective from Rawls’ Veil of Ignorance
Sabine Winters
12. Atmospheric Justice: Visualizing Atmospheric Harm by the Global Space Exploration Industry using Treadmill of Production Theory
Jack Lampkin & José Luis Carpio-Domínguez
13. ‘Spaceport of Call’: Developing a Geopolitical-Criminological Perspective on Spaceport Crime and Policing
Sarah Poss, Yarin Eski & Jack Lampkin
14. Towards International Criminalization for Orbital Debris Pollution
Eman Aboelkhair
15. The Legal Framework for Policing Outer Space
Giulio Calcara & Mika Launiala
16. Extraterritorial Criminal Jurisdiction in International Law and Environmental Space Crime
Alla Pozdnakova
17. Countering Sexual Harassment and Assault in Outer Space: Contributions from a Criminological Perspective
Kerry Clamp
18. Punishment for Offending in Space: The Ethics of Incarceration
Victoria Nagy
19. The Problem with the Placement of Space Infrastructures: The Complex Politics of Paving the Way to Space
Karlijn Korpershoek
20. The Borderlands between Law and Ethics: Jurisdiction, Enforcement, and Teleology
Brian Patrick Green
21. The Ethics of Outer Space Intelligence Operations
Benjamin Segobaetso
22. Respect for the Non-Living in Early-Stage Space Expansion
Chelsea Haramia
Conclusion – A New Hope? The Future of Researching Space Crime, Criminal Justice and Ethics
Yarin Eski & Jack Lampkin