Telecommunications and Empire.

Bibliográfalaš dieđut
Váldodahkki: Hills, Jill
Materiálatiipa: Licensed eBooks
Giella:eaŋgalasgiella
Almmustuhtton: Champaign : University of Illinois Press, 2007.
Ráidu:The History of Media and Communication Series.
Liŋkkat:https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5406/jj.8543483
Sisdoallologahallan:
  • Intro
  • Cover Page
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Abbreviations
  • Introduction
  • Definitions
  • Domestic and International Regulatory Links
  • Models of International/National Regulation
  • The Internationalization of Domestic Regulation
  • The Endgame of the WTO
  • Theoretical Framework
  • Overview
  • 1. Opening Up the British Empire
  • Background
  • International Telecoms Market Structure
  • The U.S. Domestic Market
  • Direct Radio Circuits to the Empire
  • The FCC and a State-to-State Model
  • FCC Unilateral Action: South American Empire
  • "Freedom of Information" and Liberalization of the British Empire
  • Bilateral-Bermuda Agreements 1945
  • The Death of the Bermuda Agreement
  • Bringing the ITU under U.S. Control
  • Atlantic City Conferences
  • Revising the ITU's Telegraph and Telephone Regulations
  • The Military-Industrial Linkage: ITT
  • The Impact of TAT-1
  • Foreign Investment and Dollar Diplomacy
  • Conclusion
  • 2. Satellites and U.S. Unilateral Regulation
  • Satellite Communications: The Beginnings of Private Communications Systems
  • Comsat-A Private, Unilateral Operator and Regulator
  • The Creation of Intelsat-Interim Arrangements
  • Problems with the Interim Arrangements
  • The Creation of the International Telecommunications Satellite Consortium
  • The FCC: Regulator of International Satellite Communications
  • Domsat: A Unilateral U.S. Decision
  • AT&T Rules: North Atlantic Facilities Planning
  • U.S. Domestic Policy: Unilateral Application
  • Changes in the Market
  • The End of Intelsat's Regulatory Function
  • Conclusion
  • 3. International Market Structure and the ITU
  • State-to-State-Based Networks: The ITU as Regulator
  • Computer II and International Communications
  • Leading Up to WATTC
  • 1984 Preparatory Committee
  • Final PCWATTC Text
  • The E.U. Green Paper
  • The Butler Text
  • WATTC-88: The Conference
  • Article 1.7 and Special Arrangements
  • The Outcome
  • Post WATTC
  • Conclusion
  • 4. Markets and Membership: The Restructuring of the ITU
  • Restructuring the ITU: Developing Countries Gain Power
  • The Hansen Report: Liberalization, Privatization, and Regulation
  • ITU Restructuring: The Rise of Large Users, Private Industry, and the World Bank
  • The U.S. Global Information Infrastructure and the ITU
  • Restructuring: The Rise of the Private Sector
  • Global Mobile Personal Communications Systems
  • Bypassing the ITU-"Accounting Rates"
  • The Commonwealth Model
  • The U.S. Backlash
  • ICANN: Bypassing the ITU
  • Conclusion
  • 5. The World Bank and Privatization
  • Background
  • U.S. Power over the World Bank
  • The Early Years of the World Bank's Privatization Thesis
  • The World Bank's Privatization Thesis-1980s
  • The Concept of Privatization and the British Model
  • Telecommunications Lending-The First Years
  • The Impact of the World Bank's Privatization Thesis
  • Conclusion
  • 6. GATT/WTO and Telecommunications