“The first 100 days will include a submission of a budget, and that budget will give important clues to the administration’s intentions,” Logsdon says.
Read the full article HERE.
At the Elliott School of International Affairs
“The first 100 days will include a submission of a budget, and that budget will give important clues to the administration’s intentions,” Logsdon says.
Read the full article HERE.
SPI Director Scott Pace co-authored “Navigating in Space – Taking GNSS to New Heights”, a study of Global Navigation Satellite Systems published in Inside GNSS.
“It is very plausible to speculate that the new administration will insert a mission to the lunar surface, probably international in character, as a step on the way to Mars,” said John Logsdon.
Read the full article HERE.
Dr. Logsdon’s 2015 book, After Apollo? Richard Nixon and the American Space Program, was acknowledged as the year’s “best original contribution to the field of aeronautical or astronautical non-fiction literature.” He previously received the award for his 2010 book, John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon.
“Things are more complicated now than they’ve ever been,” says Logsdon. “Space activity would occur in the new NASA-Department of Defense-intelligence community framework.”
Read the full article HERE.
Dr. Logsdon provided his perception of international space policy goals that will be decided by the Trump Administration in the near term, citing a plausible return to the lunar surface. Read the article HERE.
Visiting scholar Yonggang Fan’s research “Latecomer’s strategy: An assessment of BDS industrialization policy” was published in Volume 38 of Space Policy in which it discusses the Chinese Beidou Navigation Satellite System.
Visiting Scholar Tomas Hrozenky was published in the European Space Policy Institute’s “Voices from the Space Community” Journal No. 78. His submission, “Space – a Soft Power Tool for Europe?” deals with the question of whether or not deeper linking of space to soft power for European states could be a worthy and viable decision.
Dr. Logsdon was quoted by several sources, including National Geographic, Yahoo News, and Nature.