EDO·OS | Governance of the Future
The contemporary space ecosystem does not suffer from anarchy. It suffers from structural inadequacy. When Oman became the sixty-first signatory to the Artemis Accords in January 2026, the ceremony marked peaceful cooperation without acknowledging the underlying fracture: China and Russia are building their own station, their own global navigation architecture, their own lunar alliance. Two blocs, two competing normative frameworks in formation, and between them a regulatory vacuum that no existing instrument occupies. Chapter 15 of CLA: Algorithmic Law for the Cosmos is the cartography that vacuum demands. The chapter examines four models of space governance. The fragmented-commercial model of the United States, where six agencies divide functional jurisdictions and none supervises the autonomous maneuvers of approximately ten thousand active Starlink satellites. The integrated-state model of China, where strategic coordination produces operationally impressive results at the cost of an opacity incompatible with independent verification. The cooperative-intergovernmental model of Europe, where sustainability as strategic niche proves insufficient to impose standards on the operator that most needs them. And the emerging actors, who reveal a defining trend: access to space is being democratized in capability but not in governance. Four cross-cutting patterns emerge from comparative analysis and shape the institutional design agenda the CLA proposes to address. First: fragmentation versus integration is a false dilemma. Each model resolves certain problems at the cost of creating others. Second: commercialization has outpaced regulation in every model without exception. Third: multilateralism is in retreat, with the Artemis Accords consolidating a bifurcation that undermines precisely what space governance requires, universal rules. Fourth, and most revealing: no State, fragmented, integrated, or cooperative, has developed a framework for the unprecedented variable. The last row of Table 46 returns the same answer across all models: none exists. No assigned regulator for autonomous AI space operations. No liability mechanism for algorithmic harm. No governance designed for permanent colonies. The simultaneity of the vacuum across such distinct architectures is not an accident of political will: it is the structural consequence of governing from the nation-state a domain that definitionally transcends it. Temporal asymmetry between corporate and regulatory cycles, diffuse externalities whose costs are global but whose cost of regulating is domestic, absence of representation for those most dependent on orbital infrastructure yet least involved in designing its norms. Three mechanisms that no domestic reform can correct because they are properties of the international system as a whole. What no State can produce alone, coordination of incentives, internalization of global externalities, voice for the unrepresented, is exactly what the CLA proposes to build from outside the State. CLA: Algorithmic Law for the Cosmos available on Amazon (ES edition): https://a.co/d/0iiyP8xu [https://a.co/d/0iiyP8xu] Project website: https://deber-optimizar.mx/en [https://deber-optimizar.mx/en] LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/jesus-bernal-allende-030b2795 [https://linkedin.com/in/jesus-bernal-allende-030b2795]
33 episodes
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