This report is an historical, structural, statistical and public survey analysis of the effects of the 1996 Telecommunications Act on musicians and citizens.Each week, radio reaches nearly 95 percent of the U.S. population over the age of 12 (see Chapter 5, p. 69). But more importantly, radio uses a frequency spectrum owned, ultimately, by the American public. Because the federal government manages this spectrum on citizens' behalf, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has a clear mandate to enact policies that balance the rights of citizens with the legitimate interests of broadcasters.Radio has changed drastically since the 1996 Telecommunications Act eliminated a cap on nationwide station ownership and increased the number of stat...
This dissertation undertakes a critical cultural policy analysis of the 1996 Telecommunications Act ...
Part I traces the history of broadcast regulation, emphasizing the development of the scarcity doctr...
Musicians and songwriters occupy a unique place in society as purveyors of composition and expressio...
Nine years after deregulation became policy in commercial radio broadcasting, a study of the effects...
Mega-owners in the radio regime became possible with the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which radi...
The three essays in this dissertation study either how telecommunications regulation shapes the way ...
In 1996, Congress increased the limits on how many radio stations one firm can own within a single ...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 and ensuing radio ownership consolidation are blamed for harming ...
The deregulation of the radio industry started, not in 1980 with the Reagan administration, but in 1...
Citizens groups and both federal and state governments have recently expressed concern over the offe...
The recent Federal Communications Commission deregulation of many aspects of radio station programmi...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The rec...
Advances in technology have dramatically changed the lives of Americans throughout the twentieth cen...
This Article begins by briefly outlining the present mode of determining access to the radio spectru...
UnrestrictedThe Internet, satellite radio, and cell phones are disruptive technologies relative to r...
This dissertation undertakes a critical cultural policy analysis of the 1996 Telecommunications Act ...
Part I traces the history of broadcast regulation, emphasizing the development of the scarcity doctr...
Musicians and songwriters occupy a unique place in society as purveyors of composition and expressio...
Nine years after deregulation became policy in commercial radio broadcasting, a study of the effects...
Mega-owners in the radio regime became possible with the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which radi...
The three essays in this dissertation study either how telecommunications regulation shapes the way ...
In 1996, Congress increased the limits on how many radio stations one firm can own within a single ...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 and ensuing radio ownership consolidation are blamed for harming ...
The deregulation of the radio industry started, not in 1980 with the Reagan administration, but in 1...
Citizens groups and both federal and state governments have recently expressed concern over the offe...
The recent Federal Communications Commission deregulation of many aspects of radio station programmi...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The rec...
Advances in technology have dramatically changed the lives of Americans throughout the twentieth cen...
This Article begins by briefly outlining the present mode of determining access to the radio spectru...
UnrestrictedThe Internet, satellite radio, and cell phones are disruptive technologies relative to r...
This dissertation undertakes a critical cultural policy analysis of the 1996 Telecommunications Act ...
Part I traces the history of broadcast regulation, emphasizing the development of the scarcity doctr...
Musicians and songwriters occupy a unique place in society as purveyors of composition and expressio...