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Telecommunications Revolution: Past, Present and Future [Pehme köide]

Edited by , Edited by (MIT, USA), Edited by , Edited by
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Originally published in 1992 this book charts the global restructuring of telecommunications industries away from the monopoly structures of the past towards increased competition, deregulation and privatization. The book's authors are international policy-makers and scholars, who examine the regulatory environment within a theoretical and historical context. The book looks at the roots of regulatory and legislative changes by discussing individually the countries at the forefront of the revolution: the UK, France, Germany, Japan and the United States. It examines the impact of new technology for consequences of change in trade and government policies.

Preface: Decentralization and Deregulation on the March
1. Is
Telecomunications Truly Revolutionary?
2. Beyond the Golden Age of the Public
Network
3. The Politics of Deregulation
4. Did Regulation Keep Pace with
Technology?
5. The Significance of Telecom 2000
6. On Thinking About
Deregulation and Competition . Viewing Divestment from Afar
8. The Ecology of
Games in Telecommunications Policy
9. The Economics of International
Competition
10. The Economics of International Telecommunications
11. A
History of Recent German Telecommunications Policy
12. The Future of German
Telecommunications
13. Telecommunications Policy in France
14.
Telecommunications Plicy in Japan
15. The Politics of International
Telecommunications Reform
16. The Struggle for Control Within the
Telecommunications Networks
17. The Future of the Telecommunications
Marketplace
18. TV Technology and Government Policy
19. Negotiating The World
Information Economy . Epilogue: Communications Policy in Crisis
Harvey M. Sapolsky