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Regulation of Outer Space: International Space Law and the State

Edited by: Claudia Cinelli

ISBN13: 9781032649061
Published: August 2024
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £135.00



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This edited book focuses on how States should regulate activities in space and explores strategies to advance State responsible behaviour to ensure sustainable use and effective protection of outer space for peaceful purposes.

The time seems ripe to bring international law into the space sustainability discourse. The concept of sustainable development was conceptualized by the 1987 Brundtland Report, Our Common Future. Today, as then, the overlap between the security, environmental and economic dimensions, including in terms of intra/inter-generational equity, is reflected within the current ‘new space’ era that is now ‘our common future’.

This edited book collects original theoretical and empirical contributions. It contributes to unpack the international outer space regulatory framework in the light of current trends and pressing challenges. This offers a unique perspective and guidance thus empowering regulatory strategies for stakeholders and end-users such as scholars, policy-makers, industry and society.

Subjects:
Air and Space Law
Contents:
Foreword, Marco Ferrazzani
Introductory remarks. Advancing State responsible behaviour in outer space from an interdisciplinary perspective
Claudia Cinelli
1. Does using satellite data for sustainable development justifies unsustainable use of outer space?
Katarzyna Pogorzelska
2. Sustainability and Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in outer space
Elena Cirkovic
3. Business, human rights and international space law: filling the gaps of corporate accountability in the ‘new space’
Chiara Macchi
4. The principle of ‘Common Heritage of (Hu)mankind’: its implementation in the light of the law of the sea and the law of outer space
Anne-Sophie Martin
5. Rights without remedies? The role of arbitration in enforcing international space law for private parties
Laura Yvonne Zielinski
6. National space laws and regulations stemming from international space law
Emanuela Maio
7. Nuclear power sources in outer space for peaceful purposes: an evolving legal framework
Viviana Iavicoli
Concluding remarks. Recognizing and addressing the challenge of interdisciplinary collaboration, design, and governance in sociotechnical systems
Katlyn M. Turner