ABSTRACT

This book examines transatlantic politics through an analysis of 60 years of US-European strategic interaction in space.

The significance of space politics for the study of transatlantic relations receives surprisingly little scholarly attention. As a theatre of interaction, transatlantic space politics reflects the vicissitudes of European and US power in the international system. An understanding of space politics is therefore vital in understanding the status and prospect of the transatlantic order.

Using established IR theories, the author investigates transatlantic space politics and proposes a theoretical explanation, which is distinct from the conventional wisdom of the transatlantic security community. More specifically, he distinguishes between the constitutive and regulatory effects of the transatlantic security community, an approach rarely employed in other research in the field. Overall, this book suggests not only that the transatlantic institutional pillar requires repair, but also that the ideational factors need to be revitalised in order to consolidate the transatlantic alliance.

This book will be of much interest to students of space power, transatlantic politics, strategic studies, foreign policy and IR/security studies in general.

chapter |31 pages

Introduction

The Multi-Faceted Transatlantic Space Politics

chapter |22 pages

History Matters

Space Policy Evolution in the United States and Europe

chapter |28 pages

Cutting the Umbilical Cord

Transatlantic Competition in the Field of Space Transportation

chapter |28 pages

Springboard to Lunar and Solar Space

Transatlantic Cooperation in the International Space Station Program

chapter |26 pages

Europe Opens Its Eyes

Transatlantic Dispute in the Field of Satellite Navigation

chapter |15 pages

Dual-Space Dominance versus Autonomy in Space

Developing Cases of Transatlantic Space Politics

chapter |28 pages

Conclusion

Thinking beyond the Canopy