Front cover image for Deregulating telecommunications : U.S. and Canadian telecommunications, 1840-1997

Deregulating telecommunications : U.S. and Canadian telecommunications, 1840-1997

Deregulating Telecommunications critically examines the transition from monopoly to competition in the U.S. and Canadian telecommunications industries. Accessibly written with a minimum of technical language, this thorough yet concise book looks at the history of the telephone industry, its regulation, and over a century of related public policy.
Print Book, English, ©2000
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Lanham, Md., ©2000
xvii, 309 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
9780847698240, 9780847698257, 0847698246, 0847698254
43810827
Chapter 1 General Introduction Part 2 Part I: From Competition to Monopoly: The Consolidation and Regulation of U.S. and Canadian Telecommunications (1846-1946) Chapter 3 Introduction to Part I Chapter 4 Telegraph and Telephone: The Birth and Consolidation of the U.S. Telecommunications Industry (1840-1936) Chapter 5 Telegraph and Telephone: Building the Canadian Telecommunications Mosaic (1846-1946) Chapter 6 The Regulation of the Telephone Industry As a Public Utility: History, Theory, and Practice Chapter 7 Conclusion to Part I Part 8 Part II: From Monopoly to Competition: The Deregulation of U.S. and Canadian Telecommunications (1946-1997) Chapter 9 Introduction to Part II Chapter 10 The Power of Ideas: The Beginning of the End of Monopoly in Telecommunications Chapter 11 Step By Step toward Deregulation in the United States Chapter 12 Local Network Competition and the Deregulation of Enhanced Services in the United States Chapter 13 The Canadian Approach to Deregulation Chapter 14 From Enhanced Services to Local Network Competition: The Canadian Approach Chapter 15 Conclusion to Part II Chapter 16 General Conclusion Chapter 17 Bibliography