Volume 43
2019 • University of Mississippi School of Law
The Journal of Space Law is the oldest publication dedicated to legal issues in outer space.
Issue 1
- Bifurcated Sovereignty and the Territorial Conception of ‘The Province of All Mankind’
- There’s No Rush: Developing a Legal Framework for Space Resource Activities
- The Hague International Space Resources Governance Working Group: Reflections on the Building Blocks for an International Framework
- Exploring the Legal Challenges of Future On-Orbit Servicing Missions and Proximity Operations
- Where No War Has Gone Before: Outer Space and the Adequacy of the Current Law of Armed Conflict
Issue 2
- Law without Gravity: Arbitrating Space Disputes at the Permanent Court of Arbitration and the Relevance of Adverse Inferences
- When Galaxies Collide: Resolving Criminal Jurisdiction Disputes among Nations in Space
- Promoting Productive Cooperation between Space Lawyers and Engineers
- Accessory to War: The Unspoken Alliance between Astrophysics and the Military