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SPACE TREATY (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   132721


Criteria for developing and testing transparency and confidence / Martinez, Peter; Crowther, Richard; Marchisio, Sergio; Brachet, GĂ©rard   Journal Article
Martinez, Peter Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract space systems play an important role in sustaining the development, prosperity and security of many nations. As more nations become critically reliant on space systems, questions of maintaining safety and strategic stability in outer space have come to the fore. Transparency and Confidence-Building Measures (TCBMs) for outer space activities have an important role to play in providing clarity about the intentions of States and in articulating norms of behaviour in outer space. TCBMs take several forms. They may be the elaboration of basic principles related to the exploration and use of outer space, political measures related to establishing norms of conduct, information-sharing activities to improve the transparency of outer space activities, operational practices which demonstrate a commitment to mutual cooperation in outer space, or consultative mechanisms. We present an analytical framework for evaluating potential TCBMs and illustrate the application of this framework to examples of potential operational, regulatory, treaty-based and declaratory TCBMs.
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2
ID:   190930


Grey zone: the contours of outer space armed conflict and South Africa’s national interests / Henrico, Susan; Henrico, Ivan ; Putter, Dries   Journal Article
Henrico, Susan Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The prospect of extra-terrestrial (outer space) armed conflict between major powers is a real possibility. As early as 1966, an Outer Space Treaty was signed by over 100 countries in response to such a possibility. In 2019, NATO declared outer space a new potential war zone or military operational domain alongside air, land, sea, and cyberspace. This new war zone is mainly a strategic frontier, exclusively dominated by a few global superpowers. It would be naive to think that global superpowers’ wars fought in outer space will not have a detrimental socio-economic effect on non-participating countries. On the contrary, an outer space war will have dire consequences for the developing world, such as South Africa. This article is descriptive and explanatory in nature and analyses the potential risks of a twenty-first-century space war to South Africa's national security. It provides a deeper understanding by contextualising the international legal regulation of the military use of space, the use of force against the architecture of space resources, technological advances in satellite systems and weapons, the current geopolitical tensions between the major superpowers related to space and highlights South Africa's international relations with some of these global superpowers.
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3
ID:   028534


Utilization of outer space and international law / Reijnen, Gijsbertha C M 1981  Book
Reijnen, Gijsbertha C M Book
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Publication Amsterdam, Elsevier Scientific Publishing Company, 1981.
Description xvi, 179p.
Standard Number 0444419659
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
028471341.47/REI 028471MainOn ShelfGeneral