Airspace is a component of every nation's sovereign territory, but its upper border is uncertain. This article assesses the prospects for height limits to be created for airspace as increasing high-altitude human activity leads to events that will require jurisdiction to be determined. Taking the notion of an upper boundary to airspace, the paper develops a description of nations as three-dimensional territorial constructs. Among the implications of this would be a multiplication of state borders and border phenomena, and the potential for nations to be adjacent to each other vertically as well as horizontally.
Friday, December 13, 2013
Strauss: Boundaries in the Sky and a Theory of Three-Dimensional States
Michael J. Strauss (Centre d'Etudes Diplomatiques et Stratégiques - International Relations) has posted Boundaries in the Sky and a Theory of Three-Dimensional States (Journal of Borderland Studies, forthcoming). Here's the abstract: