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Space law as a branch of international law*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 July 2009

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‘Need I apologize for my choice of subject? Some may say it belongs to the realm of exotics of law. Some may ask: Why deal with issues so remote when there are so many much closer to us still awaiting a solution? Why reach so far?’ With these words the late Judge Manfred Lachs introduced his 1964 lecture at the Hague Academy of International Law on the topic ‘The International Law of Outer Space’. The subject is no longer exotic today. Within the three decades following the launch of Sputnik 1 in 1957, the use of space technology is now widespread, not only for military but also for civilian purposes, including satellites for communications, meteorology, television and radio broadcasting and other applications. Remote sensing data is employed in agriculture and resource management as well as in environmental monitoring. Writing a quarter of a century later than Lachs, in a prologue to a collection of articles by “a new generation of space law scholars’, K.-H. Böckstiegel notes:

‘Space law is coming of age. What started out as an exotic field of law and then continued with the discussion and codification of legal rules, following the development of exploratory space activities, is now confronted with the challenge of arriving at just and effective rules for the use of space serving many practical and conflicting economic, political and military interests.’

Type
Diversity in Secondary Rules and the Unity of International Law
Copyright
Copyright © T.M.C. Asser Press 1994

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References

1. Lachs, M., ‘The International Law of Outer Space’, 113 RdC (1964) no. 3, p. 7Google Scholar. On the life of Judge Lachs who, inter alia, chaired the Legal Sub-Committee on Outer Space in the United Nations and fostered the development of the consensus on the major aspects of space law, see the contributions by Schachter, O., Schwebel, S.M., Franck, T.M. and Chopra, S.K., ‘In Memoriam: Judge Manfred Lachs (1914–1993)’, 87 AJIL (1993) pp. 414423.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

2. For a good survey on the current applications of space technology, see Gibson, R., Space (1992).Google Scholar

3. Böckstiegel, K.-H., ‘Prologue’, in Zwaan, T. L., ed., Space Law: Views of the Future. A Compilation of Articles by a New Generation of Space Law Scholars (1988) p. 1.Google Scholar

4. Jennings, R.Y., ‘International Law’, 7 EPIL (1984) p. 278, at p. 288 et seqGoogle Scholar. The list distinguishes the following 17 major ‘topics’ or ‘branches’: (1) the position of States in international law, (2) the law relating to international peace and security, (3) the law relating to economic development, (4) State responsibility, (5) succession of States and governments, (6) diplomatic and consular law, (7) the law of treaties, (8) unilateral acts, (9) the law relating to international watercourses, (10) the law of the sea, (11) the law of the air, (12) the law of outer space, (13) the law relating to the environment, (14) the law relating to international organizations, (15) international law relating to individuals (including nationality, extradition, right of asylum and human rights), (16) the law relating to armed conflicts, and (17) international criminal law. See also Matte, N.M., ‘Space Law’, 11 EPIL (1989) pp. 303309.Google Scholar

5. The public-private law distinction, which has a different relevance in common law and civil law systems, has become increasingly difficult to define in view of the changing functions of the State over the last two centuries, see Malanczuk, P., ‘Öffentlich-rechtliche Literatur in Großbritannien’, 109 Archiv des Öffentlichen Rechts (1984) pp. 605627.Google Scholar

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7. Glendon, M.A., Gordon, M.W. and Osakwe, C., Comparative Legal Traditions (1982) p. 115.Google Scholar

8. In fact, a legal system can operate without a sophisticated classification of the law, as shown by English law where the divisions are far less clear-cut than those of most other legal systems and there has been little debate on what the divisions should be, see Weir, T., ‘The Common Law System’Google Scholar, in David, ed., op. cit. n. 6, p. 77. This has been attributed primarily to the unified jurisdiction of the higher courts and the peculiarities of the historical development of the common law, but also to the character of the English mind. The English legal professions do mentally place the law in compartments and use categories to arrange it, but such compartments and categories are mostly on a much lower level of abstraction than those used as divisions of the legal system in civil law countries. The lack of ‘any decent order’ in English law, however, does not prevent it from working. As noted by Weir: ‘A grimy and patched machine may operate very well, chaotic kitchens can produce good food, and if the index to a book is complete and accurate, it may not matter that the table of contents discloses profound disorder. Divisions which are reationally justifiable may prove in practice to be barriers or at least hurdles; legal rules may risk becoming immovables by destination’, at p. 79.

9. See Kropholler, J., ‘Comparative Law, Function and Methods’, 10 EPIL (1987) pp. 5258Google Scholar; Butler, W.E., ‘Comparative Law and International Law’Google Scholar, ibid., pp. 49–52; Hilf, M., ‘Comparative Law and European Law’Google Scholar, ibid., pp. 45–49, all with bibliographies.

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11. Its characterization as a ‘primitive legal system’, however, is somewhat misleading, see Malanczuk, P., ‘Zur Repressalie im Entwurf der International Law Commission zur Staatenverantwortlichkeit’, 45 ZaöRV (1985) pp. 293323, at 293 et seq.Google Scholar

12. In international law, this must not to be confused with the discussion on ‘sub-systems’ or ‘self-contained regimes’ which has arisen in connection with Riphagen's contribution to the efforts of the International Law Commission to codify the rules on State responsibility for internationally wrongful acts and has been critically analyzed and refuted by Simma; see Simma, B., ‘Self-contained Regimes’, 16 NYIL (1985) p. 111 et seqCrossRefGoogle Scholar. The question at issue here is whether there are special ‘sub-systems’ in international law providing for rules on the legal consequences of violations of obligations in these ‘sub-sytems’ which are ‘self-contained’ in the sense that they would exclude the application of the relevant reparation and enforcement rules of general international law. While this issue may be one aspect under which it is possible to classify international law, it is limited to the perspective of State responsibilty and, as such, is not the relevant criterion for distinguishing ‘branches’ of international law in a broader substantive sense. Moreover, it is interesting to note that the new Special Rapporteur of the ILC on State Responsibility. G. Arangio-Ruiz, has made strong reservations as to the very concept of ‘self-contained regimes’. Recent cases would indicate that ‘there if no such thing as a universal or regional self-contained regime’, and in conclusion he states that ‘none of the hypotheses of a self-contained regime seems to materialize in concreto. Furthermore, the analysis of those hypotheses leads us to formulate the most serous doubts with regard to the very admissibility in abstract of the concept of self-contained regimes as “subsystems” of the law of State responsibility … such as those created by the law of human rights, the law of diplomatic relations, the laws of tariffs and trade or the law of the EEC'. G. Arangio-Ruiz, Fourth Report on State Responsibily, UN Doc. A/A/CN.4/444/Add.2, 1 June 1992, at pp. 9 and 13.

13. See Lachs, loc. cit. n. 1, at p. 31 et seq.

14. Jennings, loc. cit. n. 4, at p. 283.

15. See Böckstiegel, K.-H., ‘Grundlagen des Weltraumrechts’, in Böckstiegel, K.-H., ed., Handbuch des Weltraumrechts (1991) p. 7Google Scholar; Gorove, S., ‘International Space Law in Perspective – Some Major Issues, Trends and Alternatives’, 181 RdC (1983) no. 3, p. 357Google Scholar states: ‘While space law may be defined briefly as the law dealing with the legal problems arising out of man's activities in outer space, the sources of such law may be found both in international and domestic law.’

16. See Böckstiegel, op. cit. n. 15, at p. 847 et seq. providing an overview of the law in Germany (Reifarth/Müller), Austria (Fasan), Switzerland (Guldimann), the United States (Gorove), and Sweden and the United Kingdom (Reifarth). See also Gorove, S., United States Space Law – National and International Regulation (1982)Google Scholar; Hosenball, S.N., ‘NASA and the Practice of Space Law’, 13 J Space L (1985) pp. 17Google Scholar; Goldman, N.C., American Space Law: International and Domestic (1988)Google Scholar; Dann, P., ‘The Future of Municipal Law in Regulating Space-Related Activities’Google Scholar, in Zwaan, op. cit. n. 3, at pp. 125–134; Gorove, S., The Growth of Domestic Space Law: An US Example, 18 J Space L (1990) pp. 99111Google Scholar; Bourély, M., ‘Quelques réflexions au sujet des législation spatiales nationales’, 16 Ann. Air & Space L (1991) pp. 245266Google Scholar; Kayser, V., ‘An Achievement of Domestic Space Law: US Regulation of Private Commercial Launch Services’, 16 Ann. Air & Space L (1991) pp. 341379Google Scholar; Dann, P., ‘Law and Regulation of Satellite Communications in the United Kingdom’, 20 J Space L (1992) pp. 125Google Scholar; Harris, P.R., ‘Space Policy for the New US Administration: A White House Conference on Space Enterprise9 Space Policy (1993) p. 82CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Kamenetskaya, E., Vereshchetin, V. and Zhukova, E., ‘Legal Regulation of Space Activities in Russia’, 9 Space Policy (1993) p. 121CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Qizhi, He, ‘Legal Progress of Space in China’, 18 Air and Space Law (1994) p. 288.Google Scholar

17. Gorbiel, A., ‘Two Decades of Space Law Codification’, reprint from 15 Postopy Astrinautyki (1982) pp. 4564Google Scholar; Danilenko, G.M., ‘Outer Space and the Multilateral Treaty-Making Process’, 4 High Tech LJ (1990) p. 217Google Scholar; Benkö, M. and Schrogl, K.U., International Space Law in the Making (1994).Google Scholar

18. See Sucharitkul, S., ‘The Role of the International Law Commission in the Decade of International Law’, 3 LJIL (1990) pp. 1542.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

19. Danilenko, loc. cit. n. 17, p. 237 at fn. 98 refers to reports by Quentin-Baxter and Baboza concerning International Liability for Injurious Consequences Arising Out of Acts Not Prohibited by International Law as examples. But the reports by Arangio-Ruiz on State Responsibility for Internationally Wrongful Acts also contain such references.

20. See Malanczuk, P., ‘Towards Global Environmental Legislation’, in United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs, ed., UN/IAF Workshop on Organising Space Activities in Developing Countries: Resources and Mechanisms (Graz, October 1993) (forthcoming)Google Scholar; see also Lang, W., ‘Environmental Treatymaking: Lessons Learned for Controlling Pollution of Outer Space’, in Simpson, J.A., ed., Preservation of Near-Earth Space for Future Generations (1994) pp. 165179.Google Scholar

21. On the work of the Committee see for example Benkö, M., ‘The United Nations's Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space: Legal Developments between 1986 and 1990’, 40 ZLW (1991) pp. 2229Google Scholar; Kopal, V., ‘The 31st Session of the Legal Subcommittee of the United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space, 23 March-10 April 1992’, 20 J Space L (1992) pp. 4656.Google Scholar

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28. See Danilenko, loc. cit. n. 17, at p. 236 et seq.

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37. Convention on Registration of Objects Launched into Outer Space, 12 November 1974, 1023 UNTS (1976) pp. 15–73.

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57. See supra, n. 49.

58. See supra, n. 45.

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137. Ibid. The reference to ‘future generations’ reminds one of the discussion on the meaning of the concept of ‘inter-generational equity’ following the frequently cited definition of ‘sustainable development’ by the Brundtland Commission in 1987.

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151. Li, K.L., World Wide Space Law Bibliography (1979), vol. I (1951-1976), vol. II (1977–86)Google Scholar; Magraw, D. and Ketter, T., ‘Law Relating to Outer Space: A Bibliography – Part I, 19 Int. Lawyer (1985) pp. 13911427Google Scholar; Magraw, D.B. and Ketler, T., ‘Law Relating to Outer Space: A Bibliography – Part II, 20 Int. Lawyer (1986) pp. 399421Google Scholar; Li, L.K., World Wide Space Law Bibliography (1989)Google Scholar. The outstanding general bibliography Public International Law, A Current Bibliography of Books and Articles, published by the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg since 1975 in 2 annual volumes, lists relevant publications under 10. Air and Space.

152. Böckstiegel, K.-H., ‘The New Space Law Database of the Institute of Air and Space Law in Cologne’, 18 J Space L (1990) pp. 155159Google Scholar. There is also the ECSL database in Paris.

153. Utrecht Studies in Air and Space Law; von Welck, S.F. and Platzöder, R., Weltraumrecht – Law of Outer Space (1987)Google Scholar; Böckstiegel, K.H. and Benkö, M., Space Law, Basic Legal Documents, Vol. I-II, now with Instalment 5 (1993)Google Scholar; Chronique des Activités spatiales. Aspects juridiques et politiques, Jan. 1991-Juin 1992, Centre d'études et de recherches sur le droit de l'espace (1993); Martin, P.M., Les textes du droit de l'espace (1993).Google Scholar

154. Such as in Cologne, Leyden and Montreal.

155. See for example, Shaw, M.N., International Law, 3rd edn. (1991) Ch. 9Google Scholar; Ipsen, K., ed., Völkerrecht, 3rd edn. (1990) Ch. 12 (H. Fischer).Google Scholar

156. Gorove, S., ed., The Teaching of Space Law around the World (1986)Google Scholar; ECSL, Space Law Teaching in Europe (1993); ECSL, ECSL Space Law and Policy Summer Course, Basic Materials (1993).

157. E. Vitt, ‘Die Weltraumkolonie’, in Böckstiegel, ed., op. cit. n. 15, pp. 579–596.

158. Project by Prof. Cocca, Argentina.

159. Gorove, loc. cit. n. 15, at p. 398.

160. J. Schwietzke, review of Beyerly's, E.Public International Law. A Guide to Information Sources (1991), 52 ZaöRV (1992) p. 1052.Google Scholar

161. 18 Pub. Int. L (1992) No. 2.

162. Art. III.

163. For references see Malanczuk, P., ‘Comments’, 21 Rev. Belge (1988) pp. 264265.Google Scholar

164. On the concept of ‘countermeasures’, see Malanczuk, , ‘Countermeasures and Self-defence as Circumstances Precluding Wrongfulness in the International Law Commission's Draft Articles on State Responsibility’, in Spinedi, M. and Simma, B., eds., United Nations Codification of State Responsibility (1987) pp. 197286.Google Scholar

165. Böckstiegel, loc. cit. n. 3, p. 2 et seq.

166. Cocca, A. A., ‘The Advances in International Law Through the Law of Outer Space’, 9 J Space L (1981) p. 13 et seq.Google Scholar

167. Wassenbergh, H.A., Principles of Outer Space Law in Hindsight (1991) p. 10.Google Scholar

168. Lachs, M., ‘The Treaty on Principles of the Law of Outer Space, 1961–1992’, 39 NILR (1992) p. 290, at 302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

169. Lachs, M., ‘Views from the Bench: Thoughts on Science, Technology and World Law86 AJIL (1992) p. 695 et seq.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

170. See H.A. Wassenbergh, in Zwaan, ed., op. cit. n. 3, at p. 143 et seq; see also Böckstiegel, loc. cit. n. 3, at p. 2.

171. Zwaan, T.L., ‘The Influence of the Achievements and Failures of the Past on the Future of Outer Space Law’Google Scholar, in Zwaan, ed., op. cit. n. 3, at p. 33 et seq.; see also Böckstiegel, loc. cit. n. 3, at p. 2, agreeing.

172. Diederichs-Verschoor, op. cit. n. 85, at p. 133.

173. Dauses, M., Die Grenze zwischen Luft- und Weltraum als Gegenstände rechtlicher Regelung (1970)Google Scholar; Gorbiel, A., Legal Definition of Outer Space (1980)Google Scholar; E. Vitt, ‘Begriffsdefmitionen’, in Böckstiegel, ed., op. cit. n. 15, pp. 35–54; Martin, P.-M., ‘Les définitions absentes du droit de l'espace”, 46 RFDAS (1992) pp. 105117Google Scholar. The issue is still on the UNCPUOS agenda.

174. Gorove, S., ed., The Space Shuttle and the Law (1980)Google Scholar; Bittlinger, H., Hoheitsgewalt und Kontrolle im Weltraum (1988)Google Scholar; Bin, Cheng, ‘Spacecraft, Satellites and Space Objects’, 11 EPIL (1989)Google Scholar; ‘Colloque: L'avion spatial et le droit’, 45 RFDAS (1991) pp. 427–587; M. Hintz, ‘Weltraumgegenstände’, in Böckstiegel, ed., op.cit. n. 15, pp. 157–204; Christol, C.Q., ‘The Aerospace Plane: Its Legal and Political Future’, 9 Space Policy (1993) p. 35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

175. Böckstiegel, K.-H., ed., Product Liability in Air and Space Transportation –Proceedings of an International Colloquium in Cologne (1978)Google Scholar; B. Schmidt-Tedd, ‘Transportsysteme’, in Böckstiegel, ed., op. cit. n. 15, pp. 485–536; Nesgos, P.D., ‘Commercial Space Transportation: A New Industry Emerges’, 16 Ann. Air & Space L. (1991) pp. 393422Google Scholar; Stockfish, B., ‘Space Transportation and the Need for a New International Legal and Institutional Regime’, 17 Ann. Air & Space L. (1992) pp. 323368Google Scholar; Christol, C.Q., ‘The “Launching State” in International Space Law’, 12 Ann. franç, droit mar. et aérospatial (1993) p. 363.Google Scholar