In conjunction with the upcoming CLE series on Immigration Law and Internment Camps in Texas, which will feature three seminars in the month of October, the Harris County Law Library is highlighting our collection of Immigration Law Resources. Throughout September, print materials on all aspects of immigration law will be on display. Treatises like Kurzban’s Immigration Law Sourcebook (the 15th edition, just published and pictured here, is now on our shelves) and a number of CLE coursebooks from TexasBarCLE will be highlighted. You’ll also find immigration law resources in the Law Library’s digital collection, including official immigration forms through Westlaw and the Georgetown Immigration Law Journal on HeinOnline. Search the Law Library catalog for additional titles or ask the library staff for assistance in finding the resources you need.
Creating an Automatic Table of Contents in Microsoft Word
To create a table of contents that’s easy to edit and maintain, begin by selecting a Heading from the Styles menu. The styles are located on the Home tab where several pre-formatted options are available to choose from. As you prepare your document, be sure to identify each new section of text with a unique heading. These are the items that will appear as entries in your table of contents.
Next, place your cursor within the document at the point where you wish you insert your table of contents, usually near the beginning. On the References tab, locate the Table of Contents button. By default, the button should be located on the far left side of the task ribbon. Click on this button and select one of the Automatic Table of Contents options. Microsoft Word will automatically create a table of contents, generated from the headings and subheadings within your document.
For a detailed demonstration of how to create, update, and customize your Table of Contents, visit the Microsoft Support site.
Ex Libris Juris Makes Texas Bar Today's Top 10
We are happy to announce that a recent Ex Libris Juris blog post - Who Owns Space Stuff? - was included in last week's Top 10 Blog Posts on Texas Bar Today, a publication of the State Bar of Texas. As the sole public law library in Space City, we are always happy for the opportunity to research and write about laws related to space exploration and our hometown space agency - NASA. Keep following our posts on Ex Libris Juris to see more posts on space law and plenty of other topics of interest to the Harris County legal community.
Announcing Upcoming Lecture Series
The Harris County Law Library is happy to announce a three-part lecture series hosted in collaboration with Harris County Attorney Vince Ryan titled Immigration Law and Internment Camps in Texas: Legal Perspectives on The Train To Crystal City by Jan Jarboe Russell. An hour-long lecture will be offered at noon on October 4, October 11, and October 18 at the Law Library's downtown Houston location. Lunch is provided and attorneys can earned 3.0 hours of CLE credit and 1.0 hour of ethics credit in Texas. For more information and to RSVP, visit the event page on the Harris County Attorney Office website.
At each event, distinguished speakers will discuss legal aspects of this year's Gulf Coast Reads featured title The Train to Crystal City. The book presents the story of internees of German and Japanese descent who found themselves at the family internment camp in Crystal City, Texas during World War II. The stories are told on a personal level with references to the federal legal mechanisms that affected each internee, many of whom were U.S. citizens, and the international politics that led to many internees being repatriated to their ancestral nations in exchange for American prisoners of war. With a story line that takes place in the Lone Star State and an author who is a native of the Texas gulf coast, this book is a natural candidate for the Gulf Coast Reads program, through which a book with local ties is read at libraries and book clubs through the month of October. Visit the Gulf Coast Reads website for more on this year's read and archives of past featured titles.
Who Owns Space Stuff?
When a meteorite hit the ground in Egypt in the 13th century, the question of what to do with it was easily answered - make a dagger out of it and give it to King Tut. The question today of who owns space objects is less-easily answered and likely to involve some litigation. For example, when a meteorite hit a clinic in suburban Virginia in 2010, a dispute arose between the doctors and the landlord about who owed the rock. After some legal research and novel arguments, the doctors were able to donate the rock to the Smithsonian and donate the finders fee to Doctors Without Borders.
In honor of Space Law Month here at the Harris County Law Library, we thought we would assemble a few resources to help answer the unusual question of who owns a celestial chattel. As with the answer to many legal questions, the answer starts with "it depends," so here are resources for a few scenarios.
Natural Objects Naturally Falling to Earth
The question of ownership over space rocks that fall from the sky seems to be jurisdictional in nature. In his 2002 article in Meteorites & Planetary Science, Canadian lawyer Douglas Schmitt provides a survey of laws of various nations applicable to found space objects. Depending on where the rock hits the Earth, it may belong to the finder, the landowner, a government agency, or a national museum. With citation to relevant cases and regulations, Schmitt's article is a great place to start your research.
Natural Objects Brought to Earth
No one is legally entitled to own lunar objects, including moon rocks, pebbles, core samples, or space dust that has been collected in the course of a lunar mission and brought back to Earth. All samples of this type are considered national treasures. One individual, Alan Rosen, learned this lesson the hard way. On a business trip to Honduras in 1995, Mr. Rosen met with a retired Honduran colonel, Roberto Argurcia Ugarte, who had acquired a moon rock and accompanying plaque following a military coup in 1973. The artifact had been given as a gift by President Nixon on behalf of the United States to the people of the Republic of Honduras. Mr. Rosen purchased the moon rock from Colonel Ugarte and brought it back to the United States in violation of 19 U.S. Code § 1595a. Upon learning of Mr. Rosen’s acquisition, the United States sought to seize the artifact in the case known as UNITED STATES of America v. ONE LUCITE BALL CONTAINING LUNAR MATERIAL (One Moon Rock) and One Ten Inch by Fourteen Inch Wooden Plaque Defendant In Rem. Details of the case and the events surrounding Mr. Rosen’s acquisition of this rare space treasure are presented in The Case of the Missing Moon Rocks, along with film footage of astronauts collecting lunar artifacts from the surface of the moon.
Man-made Objects in Space
With an estimated 21,000 bits of space debris now orbiting the Earth (for an excellent visual representation of all this space junk, see James Yoder’s fascinating website, Stuff in Space, a real-time 3D tracking tool of each object’s location, orbit, and speed), issues concerning ownership of satellites and the like can present major legal issues. When confronting these issues, there are different aspects of ownership that might be researched, including who may exert ownership over objects in orbit and who is responsible for damages if those objects do harm. In his 2012 article published in The Space Review, space law attorney Michael Listner provides an overview of laws applicable to both facets of the question. According to Listner, these objects all still belong to the country that launched them under the 1967 Outer Space Treaty, which seems to clear up the question until one considers the web of arms treaties and quasi-binding conventions and agreements that may also come into play. Listner's article will help jump start your research.
Man-made Objects Naturally Falling to Earth
When man-made objects fall from space, causing personal injury or damage to property, the question arises: Who do we sue and how do we do it? The 1972 Convention on International Liability for Damage Caused by Space Objects is a good resource to consult, unless of course the space debris is part of a United States vehicle that makes landfall on American soil. In this case, the Federal Tort Claims Act may apply. In either case, the likelihood of confronting this issue is low. Space debris does occasionally fall to Earth, and even small chunks of orbital junk (< 2 inches), can be harmful, but most of the derelict space craft and associated debris poses little risk to those of us on terra firma. Even so, as an intellectual inquiry, the question of what happens to objects hurling through space is well-addressed in this Primer on the Legal Issues Surrounding Space Debris Remediation.
With this blog post, we conclude Space Law Month at the Harris County Law Library. We hope you’ve enjoyed reading and learning about the legal issues surrounding outer space exploration as much as we’ve enjoyed sharing resources with you.
