As space continues to attract substantial public and private investment and has become ever more active, the third edition of this successful book has been fully updated to cover recent developments including the legal bases of UN Resolution 76/3 The “Space3030” Agenda, and adaptations and augmentations to basic space treaties.
As space continues to attract substantial public and private investment and has become ever more active, the third edition of this successful book has been fully updated to cover recent developments. This includes the legal bases of UN Resolution 76/3 The “Space3030” Agenda which envisages ‘space as a driver of sustainable development’ and sets out an extensive programme for the future. The work also takes account of adaptations and augmentations to basic space treaties. It examines the increasing commercialisation of space in areas such as space tourism and space mining for which four states have already adopted relevant legislation. The impact of new technologies such as the deployment of satellite constellations and micro-satellites are also scrutinised. At a time when space tourism is available to those who can afford it and when the Moon will shortly be revisited with a prospect of permanent bases, this third edition provides a firm base for the next generation of space lawyers. As with previous editions, the work draws from governmental, international organisational and other authoritative sources as well as the relevant literature in the field. The book will be an essential and comprehensive resource for students, academics and researchers as well as space agencies, governments and space-active companies. It will also be of value to technical operatives and managers who need to know the legal context within which they work.
Preface; Abbreviations and Acronyms;
1. Introduction: Actors, History
and Fora;
2. Sources of Space Law;
3. The Outer Space Treaty, 1967;
4. Space
Objects: Control, Registration, Return and Liability Treaties and Practice;
5. Astronauts;
6. Of Boundaries and Orbits;
7. The Moon and Other Celestial
Bodies;
8. Radio and the International Telecommunication Union;
9.
Environmental Regulation;
10. Satellite Communications: Telecommunications
and Direct Broadcasting;
11. Global Navigation Satellite Systems;
12. Remote
Sensing;
13. Finance and International Trade Law;
14. Commercial Activities
and the Implementation of Space Law;
15. The Military Use of Outer Space;
16.
The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence;
17. The Future
Francis Lyall is Emeritus Professor of Public Law, University of Aberdeen, Scotland, UK. He is also Honorary Director of the International Institute of Space Law and a member of the International Academy of Astronautics.
Paul B. Larsen is formerly of the Southern Methodist University and the US Department of Transportation and a professor of space law (adjunct) at Georgetown University Law Center, Washington, DC, USA.