Gregory Radisic
Development Coordinator | gregory@youngdiplomats.ca
Brisbane, Australia
Gregory Radisic is a Canadian lawyer specializing in public and private international law, with expertise in outer space law, regulatory law, emerging technologies, international trade, and securities law. He has extensive experience completing complex legal and policy projects for senior leadership at international organizations, NGOs, and government institutions.
Gregory has been recognized for his extensive advocacy and pro bono work in public international law, receiving the King Charles II Coronation Medal from the Government of Canada for his "outstanding achievement abroad that brings credit to Canada”. In 2025, he was named Top 30 under 30 by the Alberta Council for Global Cooperation.
Gregory has a history of conducting a wide range of legal, policy, and diplomatic work that has carried a high level of importance provincially, nationally, and internationally. His professional background includes roles with the European Space Agency (ESA), the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA), the UNODC’s Terrorism Prevention Branch (TPB), the Alberta Securities Commission, and the National Space Society.
Gregory is a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in Law candidate at Bond University, where his research focuses on dispute resolution and regulatory frameworks for conflicts among public and private space actors. Guided by a commitment to advancing equitable and effective governance of space, Gregory's research aims to drive positive change at the evolving frontier of space law. Gregory also is a Fellow of the Centre for Space, Cyberspace & Data Law (CSCDL), an Australian research centre studying the legal and governance challenges at the intersection of space, cyberspace, and data. In addition, Gregory is a Fellow at the For All Moonkind Institute of Space Law and Ethics, where he has delivered presentations before the United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space on the protection of lunar heritage sites. He has published and presented extensively on emerging space law issues including lunar heritage protection, asteroid resource utilization, constitutional protections for dark skies, orbital regulation, and the intersection of securities law with technological innovation.