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Turkish Space Policy in a Technopolar Paradigm Shift: A Roadmap

In 2021, Ian Bremmer coined the term technopolarity, signaling a world where big tech companies, especially in the digital realm, were gaining so much power that they were now able to ignore or even challenge nation-states. Some of these companies in the digital realm, such as X or Amazon, also own space companies such as SpaceX or Blue Origin. The space sector has been rapidly expanding with the emergence of a highly ambitious private sector worldwide, and space-based services are becoming essential for carrying on with daily life. Boosted by the power of AI technologies, space activities promise to become more prevalent, more interdependent with other emerging technologies, and thus offer even more services faster than they are today, as well as providing more power to the nation-states that master them. This is surely adding fuel to the fire in debates about technopolarity. Within this framework, this study explores how an emerging spacefaring nation like Türkiye should prepare for a technopolar world where technology companies increasingly challenge or add to the power of nation-states. The author discusses technopolarity as a concept in the making, vis-à-vis the wider understanding of polarity in international relations in general, demonstrates in which ways space activities and discussions on technopolarity are connected and puts Türkiye forward as a case study of an emerging actor in space to suggest a roadmap for a space policy in an increasingly unpredictable global environment.

Turkish Space Policy in a Technopolar Paradigm Shift A Roadmap
 

 

 

 

Introduction

 

We are in the Second Space Age (1991- present), which has undoubtedly built upon the First Space Age (1957-1990).1 Yet, it is quite different from the first one. The major difference is how the private sector, as well as the developing world, has entered the field and is reshaping the extent and scope of space activities. In this new architecture, first of all, the space realm is no longer exclusive to major powers, and second, neither cooperation nor competition between and among space actors is defined solely by the priorities of sovereign nation-states. This means that emerging powers in space have to navigate their path through a maze of not only worldly geopolitical dynamics between nation-states but also technopolar considerations regarding non-state (and state) actors where they need to continuously evaluate the innovation of new and the evolution of already-existing key technologies to carve out a role for themselves in the future.

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