Risk Tolerance and the New Space Race

Hi! I would like to submit a paper comparing the United State’s current “Space Race” with China. I would like to have the article with the following topics with their relevant sources published.
1. Compare how the United States military is less risk tolerant than China when it comes to developing space capabilities.
1a. Military history and how risk is a part of progress and how it made the United States a world dominant power
2. Talk about how US used to be more risk adverse and it lead to technological marvels.
3. How the United States Space Force should approach taking risk in order to advance and maintain our global competition in space.
4. Anything else you might add that’s relevant utilize as many sources as you can.

Here’s the submission criteria:
Target Audience: The SFJs target audience includes mid- to senior level government policymakers, the United States Space Force and other military services, civilian agencies, international partners, academics, advocates, and business professionals involved in the commercial, scientific, diplomatic, civil and national security space sectors. Below is a suggested list of preferred topics:

Space Policy.
Space Strategy.
Space Doctrine.
Space Commerce.
Space Operations.
Space Law and History.
Science & Technology.
Research & Development.
Finance and Acquisition.
Leadership, Organization & Culture.
Space Force Military, Civilian and Family.
Review of Literature.

Submissions are evaluated for originality, contribution to expanding the field of Spacepower, and other issues critical in the evolving space domain. The SFJ editorial board will only accept submitted papers written in Microsoft Word document format. Submissions may be between 2,000-5,000 words and should include embedded hyperlinks to reference sources for every factual, statistical, historical, or legal assertion.

All submissions except for literature reviews, must include an abstract, separate from the main text, of up to 200 words, with no acronyms, abbreviations, numbers, references, or citations. The abstract must, however, contain a basic-level introduction, rationale for the work, a statement of the main conclusion, and main findings that move the field forward.

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