Current telecommunications regulation is based on a series of economic assumptions. The author considers these assumptions and analyzes their continued validity, given the emergence of local exchange competition as seen in the Rochester, New York plan. The author discusses entry barriers to local exchange and the effects of the Department of Justice 1992 Merger Guidelines. The author concludes with a summary of policy recommendations arising from entry into local exchange markets and the necessity of future policy reevaluation
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 contained the promise of a deregulated national telecommunication...
Local telephone companies have long been regulated as natural monopolies. However, technological inn...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 marked a fundamental change in the attitudes of Congress and the ...
Current telecommunications regulation is based on a series of economic assumptions. The author consi...
This paper explores the relationship between technology and the policies that govern competition in ...
The consent decree that restructured the telecommunications industry by breaking up the Bell System ...
Although AT&T relinquished control of its local exchange carriers (LECs) in 1983, competition in the...
This paper analyzes the effects on the implementation of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (“Act”) ...
This thesis presents a history of United States telecommunications regulation in the 20th Century wi...
Part I of this Article outlines a few fundamentals upon which the subsequent analysis is based. It a...
This article examines the Telecommunications Act of 1996 and Congress\u27 intent that it encourage n...
In this Article, the Authors propose sweeping changes to the current telecommunications regulatory r...
The Supreme Court Opinion on local exchange competition in general and on pricing and unbundling in ...
This Article explains the monopoly rationale for conventional approaches to telecommunications regul...
Local telecommunications competition was an important goal of the 1996 Telecommunications Act. We ev...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 contained the promise of a deregulated national telecommunication...
Local telephone companies have long been regulated as natural monopolies. However, technological inn...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 marked a fundamental change in the attitudes of Congress and the ...
Current telecommunications regulation is based on a series of economic assumptions. The author consi...
This paper explores the relationship between technology and the policies that govern competition in ...
The consent decree that restructured the telecommunications industry by breaking up the Bell System ...
Although AT&T relinquished control of its local exchange carriers (LECs) in 1983, competition in the...
This paper analyzes the effects on the implementation of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (“Act”) ...
This thesis presents a history of United States telecommunications regulation in the 20th Century wi...
Part I of this Article outlines a few fundamentals upon which the subsequent analysis is based. It a...
This article examines the Telecommunications Act of 1996 and Congress\u27 intent that it encourage n...
In this Article, the Authors propose sweeping changes to the current telecommunications regulatory r...
The Supreme Court Opinion on local exchange competition in general and on pricing and unbundling in ...
This Article explains the monopoly rationale for conventional approaches to telecommunications regul...
Local telecommunications competition was an important goal of the 1996 Telecommunications Act. We ev...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 contained the promise of a deregulated national telecommunication...
Local telephone companies have long been regulated as natural monopolies. However, technological inn...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 marked a fundamental change in the attitudes of Congress and the ...