Author (s)

TITLE

Johnson-Freese Joan

 

 

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CHANGING PATTERNS OF INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION IN SPACE

Edition

Orig. Ed 1990

Description

Pages

134

ISBN #

0-89464-042-9

Cloth/Paper

U.S. Dollars

P

$28.50

Reviews

 Traditionally, the U.S. has been the unchallenged leader in space and, subsequently, the leader in international space ventures of a cooperative nature. Recently however, NASA has been increasingly less and less able to offer much in the way of attractive opportunities for other countries to work with the U.S. in international space ventures. That, added to the less-than-positive image of the U.S. regarding space of late and the increasingly pluralistic nature of the space community, has created a situation where dominant patterns of the past regarding international cooperation in space may well be changing. This book examines how and why, and the ramifications for the U.S. space program.

 ". . .should be required reading at NASA and Congress, and at any corporation or foreign government that wants to deal with NASA." - Dave Zimmerman, $ISPACE$I, March 1990. ". . .The book takes a very hard-nosed and, one could argue, realistic view of what happened in the past; it tries to draw logical lessons from this view without a nationalistic bias, and presents well formulated conclusions - which makes it worthwhile reading." John Egan, $IEarth Space Review$I, Vol. 1, No. 4, 1992.

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