Communications policymaking increasingly relies upon research derived from large-scale databases manufactured and marketed by commercial organizations. One byproduct of this situation is that substantial inequalities in access to these data arise. These information asymmetries can result in research that fails to reflect the policy considerations of the full range of interested stakeholders. This Article explores these issues via a case study of the FCC\u27s 2003 media ownership proceeding and offers suggestions for how existing disparities in access to policy-relevant data might be addressed
The second panel of From Conduit to Content: The Emergence of Information Policy and Law addresses t...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines how experts operate in the political ar...
This paper describes a vision of what telecommunications laws’ central goals should be in coming dec...
Communications policymaking increasingly relies upon large-scale databases manufactured and marketed...
For the most part, Federal Communication Commission policy has gone unnoticed by the American public...
The author describes the major communications policy forums and provides a directory of the principa...
In this Article, the Authors propose sweeping changes to the current telecommunications regulatory r...
Few areas of federal oversight have been as inconsistently addressed as that involving the regulatio...
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Comparative Media Studies, 2008.Inclu...
The Communications field must challenge traditional understandings of media in the face of a transfo...
The question of impact looms over media policy scholarship. Despite engaging similar issues, media p...
What are the challenges to effective academic participation in telecommunications policymaking? In t...
This chapter is about media policy research. It starts by establishing the fundamental significance ...
The creation, manipulation, transmission, storage, and use of information constitute the United Stat...
Despite the growing interest in the organization and regulation of media industries, there is relati...
The second panel of From Conduit to Content: The Emergence of Information Policy and Law addresses t...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines how experts operate in the political ar...
This paper describes a vision of what telecommunications laws’ central goals should be in coming dec...
Communications policymaking increasingly relies upon large-scale databases manufactured and marketed...
For the most part, Federal Communication Commission policy has gone unnoticed by the American public...
The author describes the major communications policy forums and provides a directory of the principa...
In this Article, the Authors propose sweeping changes to the current telecommunications regulatory r...
Few areas of federal oversight have been as inconsistently addressed as that involving the regulatio...
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Comparative Media Studies, 2008.Inclu...
The Communications field must challenge traditional understandings of media in the face of a transfo...
The question of impact looms over media policy scholarship. Despite engaging similar issues, media p...
What are the challenges to effective academic participation in telecommunications policymaking? In t...
This chapter is about media policy research. It starts by establishing the fundamental significance ...
The creation, manipulation, transmission, storage, and use of information constitute the United Stat...
Despite the growing interest in the organization and regulation of media industries, there is relati...
The second panel of From Conduit to Content: The Emergence of Information Policy and Law addresses t...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines how experts operate in the political ar...
This paper describes a vision of what telecommunications laws’ central goals should be in coming dec...