Institutional challenges for space activities in Europe

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenAufsätze in KonferenzbändenForschungbegutachtet

Standard

Institutional challenges for space activities in Europe. / Smith, Lesley Jane; Hörl, Kay-Uwe.
55th International Astronautical Congress 2004 : Proceedings of a meeting held 4-8 October 2004, Vancouver, BC, Canada. . 9781604236477: International Astronautical Federation, IAF, 2004. S. 4145-4157.

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenAufsätze in KonferenzbändenForschungbegutachtet

Harvard

Smith, LJ & Hörl, K-U 2004, Institutional challenges for space activities in Europe. in 55th International Astronautical Congress 2004 : Proceedings of a meeting held 4-8 October 2004, Vancouver, BC, Canada. . International Astronautical Federation, IAF, 9781604236477, S. 4145-4157, 55th International Astronautical Congress 2004 - IAC 2004, Vancouver, British Columbia, Kanada, 04.10.04.

APA

Smith, L. J., & Hörl, K.-U. (2004). Institutional challenges for space activities in Europe. In 55th International Astronautical Congress 2004 : Proceedings of a meeting held 4-8 October 2004, Vancouver, BC, Canada. (S. 4145-4157). International Astronautical Federation, IAF.

Vancouver

Smith LJ, Hörl KU. Institutional challenges for space activities in Europe. in 55th International Astronautical Congress 2004 : Proceedings of a meeting held 4-8 October 2004, Vancouver, BC, Canada. . 9781604236477: International Astronautical Federation, IAF. 2004. S. 4145-4157

Bibtex

@inbook{bfe957285c854367a4f046c3d43c187d,
title = "Institutional challenges for space activities in Europe",
abstract = "The decision of the EU in 1999 to cooperate with ESA in the development of Galileo marked a first decisive step in cooperation between these two communities. Current work on space programmes beyond Galileo, such as the Global Monitoring of Environment and Security programme (GMES), shows the need for clear institutional solutions and responses to what should become more than a mere framework space agenda. If Europe is to fulfil its space ambitions and adopt a common approach, institutional competences and abilities require clarification and formulation. The Commission in its recently published White Paper lays out an action plan designed to support space technology and activities within the EU. The EU is seen as providing the most appropriate political forum alongside optimal investment conditions for the space industry. Space technologies and applications will in turn benefit social, economic and commercial potential within the EU. If Europe wants to pursue its space ambitions effectively, as postulated in the White Paper, institutional challenges will have to be tackled sooner rather than later. Whilst recognizing current limitations on the EU's competence to legislate specifically on space matters, the White Paper seeks to address primary space issues and look toward a future European governmental agenda that includes space activities. This paper analyses the current legal framework governing the relationship between the respective inter-governmental institutional agency (The European Space Agency) and the specific supranational community of the European Union. It argues that ad hoc models of support for specific programmes, such as the establishment of the Joint Undertaking for the Galileo programme, serve only as an interim step towards realigning competence within the institutional landscape to facilitate and benefit Europe's future activities in space.",
keywords = "Law",
author = "Smith, {Lesley Jane} and Kay-Uwe H{\"o}rl",
year = "2004",
month = oct,
language = "English",
pages = "4145--4157",
booktitle = "55th International Astronautical Congress 2004",
publisher = "International Astronautical Federation, IAF",
address = "France",
note = "55th International Astronautical Congress 2004 - IAC 2004, IAC 2004 ; Conference date: 04-10-2004 Through 08-10-2004",

}

RIS

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T1 - Institutional challenges for space activities in Europe

AU - Smith, Lesley Jane

AU - Hörl, Kay-Uwe

N1 - Conference code: 55

PY - 2004/10

Y1 - 2004/10

N2 - The decision of the EU in 1999 to cooperate with ESA in the development of Galileo marked a first decisive step in cooperation between these two communities. Current work on space programmes beyond Galileo, such as the Global Monitoring of Environment and Security programme (GMES), shows the need for clear institutional solutions and responses to what should become more than a mere framework space agenda. If Europe is to fulfil its space ambitions and adopt a common approach, institutional competences and abilities require clarification and formulation. The Commission in its recently published White Paper lays out an action plan designed to support space technology and activities within the EU. The EU is seen as providing the most appropriate political forum alongside optimal investment conditions for the space industry. Space technologies and applications will in turn benefit social, economic and commercial potential within the EU. If Europe wants to pursue its space ambitions effectively, as postulated in the White Paper, institutional challenges will have to be tackled sooner rather than later. Whilst recognizing current limitations on the EU's competence to legislate specifically on space matters, the White Paper seeks to address primary space issues and look toward a future European governmental agenda that includes space activities. This paper analyses the current legal framework governing the relationship between the respective inter-governmental institutional agency (The European Space Agency) and the specific supranational community of the European Union. It argues that ad hoc models of support for specific programmes, such as the establishment of the Joint Undertaking for the Galileo programme, serve only as an interim step towards realigning competence within the institutional landscape to facilitate and benefit Europe's future activities in space.

AB - The decision of the EU in 1999 to cooperate with ESA in the development of Galileo marked a first decisive step in cooperation between these two communities. Current work on space programmes beyond Galileo, such as the Global Monitoring of Environment and Security programme (GMES), shows the need for clear institutional solutions and responses to what should become more than a mere framework space agenda. If Europe is to fulfil its space ambitions and adopt a common approach, institutional competences and abilities require clarification and formulation. The Commission in its recently published White Paper lays out an action plan designed to support space technology and activities within the EU. The EU is seen as providing the most appropriate political forum alongside optimal investment conditions for the space industry. Space technologies and applications will in turn benefit social, economic and commercial potential within the EU. If Europe wants to pursue its space ambitions effectively, as postulated in the White Paper, institutional challenges will have to be tackled sooner rather than later. Whilst recognizing current limitations on the EU's competence to legislate specifically on space matters, the White Paper seeks to address primary space issues and look toward a future European governmental agenda that includes space activities. This paper analyses the current legal framework governing the relationship between the respective inter-governmental institutional agency (The European Space Agency) and the specific supranational community of the European Union. It argues that ad hoc models of support for specific programmes, such as the establishment of the Joint Undertaking for the Galileo programme, serve only as an interim step towards realigning competence within the institutional landscape to facilitate and benefit Europe's future activities in space.

KW - Law

UR - http://toc.proceedings.com/00392webtoc.pdf

M3 - Article in conference proceedings

SP - 4145

EP - 4157

BT - 55th International Astronautical Congress 2004

PB - International Astronautical Federation, IAF

CY - 9781604236477

T2 - 55th International Astronautical Congress 2004 - IAC 2004

Y2 - 4 October 2004 through 8 October 2004

ER -