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International space law and norms: an approach for assessing compliance

The number and types of space activities and space actors continue to increase, posing new and unique challenges for space governance and policy. Presently, a comprehensive, periodic, and systematic measure of states’ efforts to comply with existing international space law and norms does not exist,...

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Main Author: Lindgren, David
Other Authors: Martinez, Peter
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Electrical Engineering 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Lindgren, David
author2 Martinez, Peter
author_browse Lindgren, David
Martinez, Peter
author_facet Martinez, Peter
Lindgren, David
author_sort Lindgren, David
collection Thesis
description The number and types of space activities and space actors continue to increase, posing new and unique challenges for space governance and policy. Presently, a comprehensive, periodic, and systematic measure of states’ efforts to comply with existing international space law and norms does not exist, suggesting a critical need to ensure robust and informed policymaking as space activities and actors increase. The evidence-based policymaking and programming movement, alongside the rise of ratings and rankings research, suggest the utility of such an assessment to informing policymaking and identifying compliance or partial or noncompliance of spacefaring countries. Numerous ratings and rankings assessments measure country-level trends across various sectors, including but not limited to business, democracy, economics, human rights, governance, and prosperity. However, none currently measure the behaviour and policies of countries regarding the exploration and use of outer space. An annual space report, published by the Space Security Index, does provide an overview of space activities and trends according to various thematic areas, but neither provides a historical nor baseline comparison of states’ behaviour. This dissertation endeavours to propose a set of criteria, grounded in international space treaties and United Nations-level principles, resolutions, and guidelines, for which space policy stakeholders can apply to countries and develop a comparative understanding of their levels of compliance with binding international space law and non-binding space norms.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/31548 International space law and norms: an approach for assessing compliance Lindgren, David Martinez, Peter Electrical Engineering The number and types of space activities and space actors continue to increase, posing new and unique challenges for space governance and policy. Presently, a comprehensive, periodic, and systematic measure of states’ efforts to comply with existing international space law and norms does not exist, suggesting a critical need to ensure robust and informed policymaking as space activities and actors increase. The evidence-based policymaking and programming movement, alongside the rise of ratings and rankings research, suggest the utility of such an assessment to informing policymaking and identifying compliance or partial or noncompliance of spacefaring countries. Numerous ratings and rankings assessments measure country-level trends across various sectors, including but not limited to business, democracy, economics, human rights, governance, and prosperity. However, none currently measure the behaviour and policies of countries regarding the exploration and use of outer space. An annual space report, published by the Space Security Index, does provide an overview of space activities and trends according to various thematic areas, but neither provides a historical nor baseline comparison of states’ behaviour. This dissertation endeavours to propose a set of criteria, grounded in international space treaties and United Nations-level principles, resolutions, and guidelines, for which space policy stakeholders can apply to countries and develop a comparative understanding of their levels of compliance with binding international space law and non-binding space norms. 2020-03-11T10:18:02Z 2020-03-11T10:18:02Z 2019 2020-03-11T07:51:21Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31548 eng application/pdf Department of Electrical Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
spellingShingle Electrical Engineering
Lindgren, David
International space law and norms: an approach for assessing compliance
thesis_degree_str Master's
title International space law and norms: an approach for assessing compliance
title_full International space law and norms: an approach for assessing compliance
title_fullStr International space law and norms: an approach for assessing compliance
title_full_unstemmed International space law and norms: an approach for assessing compliance
title_short International space law and norms: an approach for assessing compliance
title_sort international space law and norms an approach for assessing compliance
topic Electrical Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31548
work_keys_str_mv AT lindgrendavid internationalspacelawandnormsanapproachforassessingcompliance