ISS MSS - banner 2

Register today for our Space Café “Law Breakfast with Steven Freeland” on 11 August 2022

Space Café “Law Breakfast with Steven Freeland” will analyse current space developments with a legal focus. It will, at the same time discuss and ‘demystify’ the law for everyone.

In our next Space Café “Law Breakfast with Steven Freeland”, Host Steven Freeland, Emeritus Professor of International Law at Western Sydney University, Sydney and Professorial Fellow at Bond University, Australia, and Co-Host Torsten Kriening, SpaceWatch.Global’s Publisher, welcome Annie Handmer and Christopher Johnson at the wonderful and cosy Café in Washington, D.C.

Over bagels, croissants, coffee and other treats, we will discuss many legal issues arising from everyday space activities, including the following:

  • Stay tuned for more

Annie and Christopher, both leading experts in space law, will also provide their ‘one word’ to describe the wonders of space/space law – a tradition for all guests at the Space Café Law Breakfasts, and help to demystify the sometimes complex and contradictory vested interests involved in space activities and industry.

We hope that you will enjoy this discussion and will join us on 11 August at 12.30 pm CEST. There are so many more issues to discuss. Please come along with your favourite breakfast treat and any questions that you might want us to analyse.

We really hope you will join us for breakfast! See you then!

SpaceWatch.Global is a Europe-based digital magazine and portal for those interested in space and the far-reaching impact of the space sector.

This Space Café ”Law Breakfast with Steven Freeland” will be conducted in English on 11 August 2022 at 12:30 pm CEST.

Reserve your place today.

To register please click here

Check Also

#SpaceWatchGL Geopolitics – Italy’s unfulfilled Space destiny

This year Italy is hosting two of the most important events for the Space domain, alongside chairing the G7. But what could be the perfect opportunity to consolidate Italy’s position in the Space sector falls short in the hands of a political class without a clear strategic vision, confining Italy to be characterized by a historical lack of planning capacity and low technical ambitions, in contrast with the several industrial and academic excellences that it expresses at worldwide level in the aerospace sector.