That said, other persistent tenants of U.S. strategic culture, such as casualty aversion, the pursuit of freedom and progress, and the use of outer space for «peaceful purposes» remain guiding principles of
U.S. space policy, across administrations.
Such actions, combined with the reluctance to join PAROS, and the larger context of
U.S. space policy, amplify the concerns of other countries.
Not exact matches
Driven by a debt binge by the E&P
space, which was enabled by the central bank
policy, the
U.S. oil industry was able to achieve record oil production.
U.S. policy toward Latin America has fluctuated between open support of dictatorships and hostility toward movements of liberation, and advocacy of a «restricted democracy,» in which a limited amount of political
space is allowed so long as it does not rock the boat too much internally and in the hemisphere.
The new administration appears to be advocating the development of privately operated
space stations and the «large - scale economic development of
space,» similar to
policies advanced under the previous
U.S. administration of President Obama.
Although it remains unclear precisely what role
U.S. strategic culture will play in shaping future
space policy, it is likely that a sense of
U.S. exceptionalism and the use of
space to protect
U.S. interests in vital circumstances will remain.
Finally, the tradition with NOAA and most other
U.S. space agencies has been «a free and open data - sharing
policy.»
Akin sits on the House Committee on Science,
Space, and Technology, which is responsible for much of the
U.S. federal science enterprise, so he should be aware of what science actually says about key
policy issues.
In practice, the moves meant
U.S. companies and researchers seeking a government permit to share technologies with foreign partners faced «a presumption of denial,» says Scott Pace, director of the
Space Policy Institute at George Washington University (GWU) in Washington, D.C. «If you want to export something the answer is no unless you have a specific waiver or exemption.»
Logsdon's research interests focus on the
policy and historical aspects of
U.S. and international
space activities.
Space policy in the
U.S. has gone through an upheaval.
U.S. Senators Susan Collins and Angus King, Congressman Bruce Poliquin, LePage administration Senior
Policy Advisor John Butera and Ellsworth Mayor Robert Crosthwaite were on hand to launch the new facility, which is the first step in the Laboratory's long - range plan to gradually migrate mouse production (except for the research mice used by JAX scientists) from Bar Harbor to Ellsworth, freeing up
space in Bar Harbor to expand research and education programs.
In this role, Dr. Nield provides strategic leadership and direction to ensure the protection of the public, property, and the national security and foreign
policy interests of the United States (
U.S.) during commercial launch or reentry activities, and to encourage, facilitate, and promote
U.S. commercial
space transportation.
By: Cara Condit, Director for Arctic Study and
Policy,
U.S. Coast Guard Academy The
U.S. Coast Guard Center for Arctic Study and
Policy (CASP) organized the recent «Governing Across the Waves Workshop: Global Insights for Transboundary Waterways Management in Sensitive and Congested Maritime
Spaces,» which aimed to support the ongoing efforts by the
U.S. and Russian governments to achieve the shared objectives in the Bering Strait region of safe, secure, and environmentally responsible maritime traffic.
This «fail safe»
policy of engineering design was also adhered to in the infamous «O Rings» sealing joints on the
U.S. Space Shuttle in 1986 that failed resulting in disaster.
He served as professor of environmental sciences at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA (1971 — 94); distinguished research professor at the Institute for
Space Science and Technology, Gainesville, FL (1989 — 94); chief scientist,
U.S. Department of Transportation (1987 — 89); vice chairman of the National Advisory Committee for Oceans and Atmosphere (NACOA)(1981 — 86); deputy assistant administrator for
policy,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (1970 — 71); deputy assistant secretary for water quality and research,
U.S. Department of the Interior (1967 — 70); founding dean of the School of Environmental and Planetary Sciences, University of Miami (1964 — 67); first director of the National Weather Satellite Service (1962 — 64); and director of the Center for Atmospheric and
Space Physics, University of Maryland (1953 — 62).
On March 31, the
U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Science
Space and Technology held a hearing on Climate Change: Examining the Processes Used to Create Science and
Policy.
As a historian, she specialized in the history of
U.S. foreign
policy, the Cold War, and
space exploration.
Implemented Industrial Scientific as a national vendor for
U.S. - confined
space entry processes, standardizing equipment at 26 shop and washrack locations; developed and integrated a standardized PPE purchase program, collaborating with Crawford Electric to improve accountability, standardization, and compliance with
U.S. PPE
policies; and conceptualized and designed process manuals for all washrack functions, effectively improving safety performance.