EDITORIAL: CONSTITUTING THE COSMOS: GLOBAL CONSTITUTIONALISM, PUBLIC TRUST, AND THE REGULATION OF OUTER SPACE IN INDIA
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
NLUJ
Abstract
As the Indian Space Research Organisation opens itself to private players, the
privatisation of India’s space sector must be constitutionally sound, democratically
supervised, and designed to protect both public interest and individual rights. Using
precedents such as the 2G Spectrum and Coalgate cases, this article contends that space
resources like orbital slots, spectrum, and launch infrastructure must be allocated through
transparent, non-arbitrary mechanisms. It also examines privacy and data governance
challenges posed by remote sensing, geospatial technologies, and the Digital Personal Data
Protection Act, highlighting risks of unchecked state and potentially, private surveillance,
all through the lens of reasonability and the public trust doctrine. Internationally, it
critiques the lacunae in the Outer Space Treaty and the selective applicability of
instruments like the Artemis Accords, calling for stronger global accountability measures
within the country.
Description
Keywords
Citation
9 (2) CCAL (2025)
