This collection explores the evolution of the commercial space industry from the beginning of the space age through the early twenty-first century. Today, the space industry is taking on an increased leadership and innovation role in both space access and exploration. The growth of commercial space over the past decades offers a potential new paradigm for space exploration one in which industry transitions from supplier to partner. However, many questions remain. This book seeks to bring to light these questions, which span from the most seemingly consequential: how will humanity explore the Moon and Mars? - to the most basic: what is commercial space?
To further develop the historical context of commercial space, and thereby better inform decision-making at NASA in the future, this volume examines a broad range of questions related to the history of commercial space operations, including but not limited to: how has the concept of commercial space evolved in different fields and disciplines? What have been the major events and milestones in the emergence and evolution of commercial space activities in the USA and internationally? How has the US Government assisted or impeded the emergence and evolution of commercial space activities? Providing contributions from a range of different disciplines and backgrounds, the authors of this volume offer valuable insights for scholars researching the history of space and space policy, as well as decision-makers working at NASA or within the wider space industry.
1: What is Commercial Space?.- 2: Commercial Space, Private Space,
Something Else? Analyzing the Historiography of Twenty-First Century
Spaceflight.- 3: Making Space for Commercial Spaceflight/Questioning the
Future in a History Museum.- 4: Organizing for Success: The Lessons of Early
Commercial Air for Commercial Space.- 5: What were we thinking? Space
commercialization, 1960-1990.- 6: Space Commercialization, 1983-1985: What
was Promised, and What was Delivered (or Not).- 7: Pathfinder to Profit:
Lessons from the Space Shuttle Era.- 8: The Politics of Commercialization and
the Near Collapse of American Civil Remote Sensing, 1978-1998.- 9: ESA and
the Rise of Commercial Space.- 10: The Fragmentation of American Commercial
Space Law: Historical Development and Current Issues of US Space Regulation.-
11: International Law in a Commercial Space World: Historical Lessons and
Future Development.- 12: Legal and Policy Implications of the Growth of
Commercial Space .- 13: The Evolution of Commercial Space and Its Integration
with US Military Space.- 14: The Dual-Use Nature of Space Technology from a
Considerable Threat to an Opportunity.- 15: Conclusion.
Brian C. Odom is the Chief Historian at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) where he leads the program responsible for capturing, preserving, and disseminating the agencys history. Based in the USA, he is co-editor of NASA and the Long Civil Rights Movement (2019) which was awarded the 2019 Eugene M. Emme Astronautical Literature Award by the American Astronautical Society (AAS) and NASA and the American South (2024).