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Some Trends in the Political and Legal Thinking on the Conquest of Space
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 May 2009
Extract
On 4th October, 1957, a man-made machine forche first time overrode the age old law proclaiming that everything that goes up must come down. Fifteen months later a means was developed of circumventing the earth's attraction. In September, 1959, the moon was reached and on 12th April, 1961, Major Gagarin orbited the Earth in a space capsule. In the short period of four years man's advance in space has been more rapid than the most sanguine forecaster has dared to predict, and it is now realized that a new phase in the history of mankind of exploration and development has begun in some ways comparable to, but vastly exceeding these in scope, the conquest of the sea and the air. Nobody can visualize the impact the conquest of space is going to have on life on this planet, but it becomes clearer every day that a process of change has started more profound and more sweeping than any which has overtaken the world since the foundation of the modern world.
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References
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44a. “Les Etats seront préparés à élaborer ou accepter telle ou telle règle selon qu'ils seront ou non assurés contre l'utilisation militaire de l'espace. Il est probable en particulier que, si cette assurance n'existe pas sous la forme d'une distinction d'activités licites et d'activités illicites, ces Etats essayeront (quelque illusoire que soit peut-être cette protection) d'étendre leur souveraineté territoriale sur l'espace, pour éviter que des activités dangereuses pour leur sécurité ne soient en mesure de se déployer au voisinage de leur territoire”, Chaumont, Charles, Le Droit de l'Espace, Paris 1960, p. 94.Google Scholar
45. It has been mentioned above that an approach which seems to be gaining some support is to limit the extent of sovereignty to a height lower than the perigee of past satellites (say a hundred miles). The Study Group on the Law of Outer Space established by the DAVID DAVIES Memorial Institute of International Studies, suggests in its Draft Code of Rules on the Exploration and Uses of Outer Space, as a definition of “Airspace”: the volume of space between the surface of the earth at sealevel and an altitude of 80.000 meters above it. Among the writers favouring a more or less analogous approach are the Russian writer G. P. Zhukov, who gave this opinion during an exchange of views in the editorial office of the Russian paper International Affairs on 5th October 1959; the discussion has been published in the November 1959 issue of that paper; the American writer Professor J. C. Cooper, in a lecture presented at Leyden University on 10th October 1960 “Fundamental Questions of Outer Space Law” suggested that the boundaries of outer space be fixed and that the lower boundary should be at a point above the surface of the earth where it is possible to put a satellite in orbit at least once round the earth.
The writer of this article, on the basis of the considerations given above, believes that under present circumstances efforts to reach agreement on the exact limit are bound to fail (videi.a. the opinion of the British Government). In the same sense Schick, F. B., “Space Law and Space Politics”, The International and Comparative Law Quarterly, 10 1961, p. 691.Google Scholar
46. The satellites used in joint ventures might f.i. have a destructive charge on board enabling parties participating in the venture to neutralize the satellites in times of emergency.
47. See on the “possible” technical developments Golovine, M. N., Conflict in Space, London, 1962.Google Scholar
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