A Communications Cornucopia: Markle Foundation Essays on Information Policy
Roger G. Noll (Editor), Monroe E. PriceBooks.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.
Synopsis
The essays in this book provide a broad look at the many ways that information technology relates to issues of governance and public policy. Adjusting regulatory institutions to the new technical realities is a great challenge. Will monopoly power threaten the traditionally regulated areas of telephones and cable television or the software systems that integrate all information technologies into a single system with many competing players? Can traditional approaches to intellectual property rights and control of socially harmful content be applied to the converged information sector? This book sheds light on these issues, and in so doing demonstrates the usefulness of rigorous, multidisciplinary policy analysis in assessing the significance of changing technology.
Booknews
Provides a broad look at the ways in which information technology relates to issues of governance and public policy. Sections cover major themes in contemporary communications policymaking, including media and democracy, media and children, and communications policy. Specific subjects include television and the transformation of Russia, media content labeling systems, global communication policy and the realization of human rights, the evolving politics of telecommunications regulation, and electronic substitution in the household-level demand for postal delivery services. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.