Abstract
When the time comes to decide how to govern an extraterrestrial settlement there will be many
alternatives to chose from. We will have the opportunity to try new and so far untested theories, but
there are also some old forms of government that might be tempting to try again. We might for instance
let the company whose activities on the world are the reason for the establishment govern the
settlement. This has been tried before on our own planet both because it was seen as convenient and as
an incentive for colonisation. In this chapter I will ask what this solution would mean for the civil
liberty of the settlers. To answer the question I will look at some historical analogues and have a
philosophical discussion. The conclusion is that a settlement governed by a body whose sole reason for
existence is to make money for the owners, that is led by a board that answers only to the owners and
not to the people, that functions as both government and sole employer, and that has the unlimited
power over the life support systems necessary for the survival of the settlers will not be a good basis for
civil liberties.