{"href":"https:\/\/lawhuborg-www-dev.azurewebsites.net\/podcasts\/i-am-the-law\/oembed\/149\/space-law-the-work-behind-an-emerging-practice","version":"1.0","provider_name":"LawHub","provider_url":"https:\/\/lawhuborg-www-dev.azurewebsites.net","width":640,"height":280,"type":"rich","html":"<iframe width=\"100%\" height=\"280\" src=\"https:\/\/lawhuborg-www-dev.azurewebsites.net\/podcasts\/i-am-the-law\/player\/149\/space-law-the-work-behind-an-emerging-practice\" title=\"I Am The Law Episode 149: Space Law: The Work Behind an Emerging Practice w\/ Kyle McEntee\" allow=\"autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; fullscreen; picture-in-picture\" frameBorder=\"0\" loading=\"lazy\" style=\"border-radius: 12px;\"><\/iframe>","title":"I Am The Law Episode 149: Space Law: The Work Behind an Emerging Practice w\/ Kyle McEntee","description":"Michelle Hanlon spent 25 years as a cross-border M&A lawyer before earning an LLM in space law and reinventing her practice around an environment that nobody quite controls but many want to. Space law is barely developed, but much of the daily work looks like any other industry: contracts, regulatory compliance, and drafting provisions that account for risks nobody else is thinking about yet. Michelle holds a permanent observer seat at the UN committee where international space law is written, and in this episode she breaks down the craft of persuading legislators and diplomats, why industries often write the standards Congress later codifies, and how deep subject-matter fluency reshapes even conventional legal work. Michelle Hanlon is a graduate of Georgetown University Law Center.","thumbnail_width":300,"thumbnail_height":300,"thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/artwork.captivate.fm\/31945c7f-110c-4db7-8e39-9ae6b17c62be\/blue-logo-odd.jpg"}