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PRESS RELEASE: Space Settlements, Property Rights, and International Law Can real estate on the Moon be legally claimed, owned, and resold, without violating international treaties or other laws? A newly published article in the Journal of Air Law & Commerce, the oldest and most respected law journal in its field, indicates that it could - but only by privately owned "space settlements". The article Space Settlements, Property Rights, and International Law: Could a Lunar Settlement Claim the Lunar Real Estate It Needs to Survive?, which appears in the latest issue of the Journal (Vol. 73, No. 1, published May 5th), could have a significant effect on the future of entrepreneurial space development. The article demonstrates, thorough dozens of expert opinions, legal precedents, historical records, and logic that while nations cannot claim "national sovereignty" in space, a true private settlement on the Moon could claim a reasonable amount of private extraterrestrial land ownership there. Further, the article goes on to establish that the U.S. would be allowed to recognize a settlement's land claims, and permit the sale of parts of that Lunar real estate to U.S. citizens back on Earth. All other nations could do the same for their citizens, and the same rules would apply for private settlements established on Mars or an asteroid. It's long been known that the right to sell Lunar real estate would be the only economic incentive that could make a privately funded space program profitable - but there was doubt about whether that would be legal under the accepted international space treaties Hopefully this article, and the fact that the Journal of Air Law and Commerce published it, will put some of that doubt to rest. Don't expect to buy a real deed to Lunar land (as opposed to a "novelty" item) any time soon, however. Space Settlements, Property Rights, and International Law makes it clear that the only ones who can claim Lunar land, and sell it to you, are those who have succeeded in establishing a permanent settlement there before they make a claim. That is, the company of men and women who have built real rocket ships, gone to live on the Moon to stay, and offer to sell tickets on the their ships to anyone who wants to visit the Moon and can afford it. The article takes up all of the possible objections to private property in space and attempts to answer each of them through precedents as varied as the Russian settlement of Alaska, The U.S. Deep Seabed Hard Mineral Resources Act, and the U.S.-Iran Treaty of 1957, historical documents, legal principles, as well as expert opinions from contemporary experts and historical authorities from Seneca to Heinlein. After 42 pages of detailed arguments and discussion (including over 180 footnotes), the article concludes:
A PDF file of the article, as it appears in the Journal, can be found in the Institute's Research Library or at http://www.space-settlement-institute.org/Articles/jal73-1Wasser.pdf. The Journal of Air Law and Commerce, published by Southern Methodist University's Dedman Law School, in Dallas, Texas, is the oldest scholarly periodical in the English language devoted primarily to the legal and economic problems affecting aviation and space. It circulates in 54 countries. To subscribe, or purchase a single issue, see http://www.smu.edu/lra/Subscribe.asp . | |||