A decision made under electoral pressure in the 1980s has lasting consequences for policy in the present.
Moonrise over the Pacific ocean at Narrawallee Beach, on the south coast of New South Wales in Australia, 6 June 2020 (David Gray/Getty Images) Published 24 May 2021 06:00 0 Comments
International space law has again become a theatre of geopolitical competition. Unlike the bipolar space race of the Cold War era, a proliferating cast of countries and corporations are developing spacefaring capacity, testing the limits of existing law. China recently matched the United States in landing a probe on Mars, where Elon Musk’s SpaceX intends to land a crewed mission by 2026. India and the European Space Agency have joined the US, China and Russia in successful lunar missions, and Luxembourg and the United Arab Emirates have passed domestic legislation to position themselves as la
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Scott Morrison s in a race to get re-elected before he has to do the one thing he s stubbornly avoided
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Rhodes will not fall: Oxford college says statue will stay
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