Home

astronömia

Astronömia is a multidisciplinary field concerned with the governance, law, ethics, and sociology of astronomy and human activities in outer space. The name derives from astron-, meaning star, and nomia, meaning law or governance, with a stylistic umlaut intended to signal its distinction from conventional terms. In practice, astronömia is used in speculative discourse and by some space-policy scholars to examine how international norms, national regulations, and institutional practices shape astronomical research and space exploration.

Its scope includes space governance structures, orbital resource rights, debris mitigation, space traffic management, access to

Methodologically, astronömia draws on comparative law, policy analysis, ethics, science and technology studies, and case studies

The field is informal and largely institutionalized as a cross-disciplinary area within policy programs and theoretical

See also space law, space policy, orbital debris, planetary protection, data governance, science diplomacy.

astronomical
data,
intellectual
property,
and
planetary
protection.
It
also
considers
ethical
issues
such
as
the
cultural
implications
of
observing
celestial
bodies,
equity
of
access
to
space-derived
benefits,
and
the
societal
impact
of
large-scale
observatories.
of
treaties
like
the
Outer
Space
Treaty
and
data-sharing
agreements.
It
interfaces
with
space
law,
space
policy,
astronomy,
planetary
science,
and
philosophy
of
science.
discussions.
Some
critics
question
its
practical
utility
beyond
existing
space-law
and
policy
disciplines,
while
proponents
argue
that
it
offers
a
unifying
frame
for
addressing
governance
challenges
posed
by
growing
space
activity.