The Irony of Regulatory Reform: The Deregulation of American Telecommunications
Autor Robert Britt Horwitzen Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 mar 1991
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780195069990
ISBN-10: 0195069994
Pagini: 424
Dimensiuni: 156 x 233 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0195069994
Pagini: 424
Dimensiuni: 156 x 233 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
A valuable contribution to understanding U.S. society of the 1990s....A well-crafted, important history of the politics, bureaucracy, and marketplace of telecommunications....An informative, thoroughly researched, and timely analysis of our cable news network society...Contributes significantly to the literature of partisan, policy, and systems politics, enhancing our understanding of the every-increasing complex relations between government...and business.
Thoroughly researched, effectively organized, and unusually well written...Deals with important subject matter analytically and raises interesting and thoughtful interpretative issues on almost every page. Of all the books that I have read on deregulation, this is the best so far.
Definitely recommended reading for anyone at all interested in U.S. regulation.
A finely detailed work of scholarship that is particularly strong in its review of the various theories of political and regulatory behavior.
Well worth recommending. Horwitz has unusual command over a complex subject, writes with a real concern to set the historical record straight, and, unlike many theorists in the area, has no particular ideological axe to grind. His judgments are balanced and nuanced, his curiosity keen, and his scholarship deep.
Horwitz has placed the entire history of telecommunications regulation against a background of regulatory policy in general and has written a very effective account of the history of telecommunications regulation in general. The telecommunications section in particular is first rate and won't be readily superseded.
A major contribution....Offers an unusually comprehensive and useful overview of the complex history and theory of American economic and social regulation and should become a staple of courses on media law and policy.
His book can be read with benefit both by those new to the field (for he includes well-summarized historical material throughout) and by those who have lived with telecommunications change over recent decades (for he stands back and provides a clear picture, with benefit of hindsight and a theoretical framework, of the many seemingly conflicting trends).
Ironies abound in this lucid critique of a reform movement that has succeeded mainly in confounding its oddly coupled instigators. With a merciful minimum of academic jargon, Horwitz probes the many-splendored realities of deregulation....A cogent analysis of the mischief that can occur when ideologues join forces to apply political solutions to socioeconomic problems....For anyone interested in how the law of unintended consequences works in the real world.
Thoroughly researched, effectively organized, and unusually well written...Deals with important subject matter analytically and raises interesting and thoughtful interpretative issues on almost every page. Of all the books that I have read on deregulation, this is the best so far.
Definitely recommended reading for anyone at all interested in U.S. regulation.
A finely detailed work of scholarship that is particularly strong in its review of the various theories of political and regulatory behavior.
Well worth recommending. Horwitz has unusual command over a complex subject, writes with a real concern to set the historical record straight, and, unlike many theorists in the area, has no particular ideological axe to grind. His judgments are balanced and nuanced, his curiosity keen, and his scholarship deep.
Horwitz has placed the entire history of telecommunications regulation against a background of regulatory policy in general and has written a very effective account of the history of telecommunications regulation in general. The telecommunications section in particular is first rate and won't be readily superseded.
A major contribution....Offers an unusually comprehensive and useful overview of the complex history and theory of American economic and social regulation and should become a staple of courses on media law and policy.
His book can be read with benefit both by those new to the field (for he includes well-summarized historical material throughout) and by those who have lived with telecommunications change over recent decades (for he stands back and provides a clear picture, with benefit of hindsight and a theoretical framework, of the many seemingly conflicting trends).
Ironies abound in this lucid critique of a reform movement that has succeeded mainly in confounding its oddly coupled instigators. With a merciful minimum of academic jargon, Horwitz probes the many-splendored realities of deregulation....A cogent analysis of the mischief that can occur when ideologues join forces to apply political solutions to socioeconomic problems....For anyone interested in how the law of unintended consequences works in the real world.
Notă biografică
Robert Britt Horwitz is Associate Professor of Communication at the University of California, San Diego.