Mega-owners in the radio regime became possible with the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which radically deregulated national and local radio station ownership limits that had been in existence for almost sixty years. The Act reflected Congress\u27s firm belief that a deregulated marketplace would best serve the public interest. This Note argues that the 1996 Act is an example of excessive adherence to the marketplace model, particularly for regulating the radio industry. The Author argues that although a less extreme marketplace model has guided the FCC\u27s regulation of radio since the early 1980s, the current incarnation of the marketplace model is both contrary to the public interest and economically harmful for radio stations and ind...
Part I traces the history of broadcast regulation, emphasizing the development of the scarcity doctr...
Part I traces the history of broadcast regulation, emphasizing the development of the scarcity doctr...
Part I traces the history of broadcast regulation, emphasizing the development of the scarcity doctr...
Mega-owners in the radio regime became possible with the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which radi...
The FCC has regulated the ownership structure of the broadcasting industry in order to protect the p...
In 1996, Congress increased the limits on how many radio stations one firm can own within a single ...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 eliminated nationwide radio ownership restrictions and liberalize...
The 1996 Telecommunications Act has forever transformed the regulatory landscape. The Act contemplat...
In this paper I theoretically and empirically study the effects of radio ownership structure on reve...
(Excerpt) By enacting the Telecommunications Act of 19961, Congress mandated large-scale deregulatio...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 represented an enormous experimental step towards deregulating th...
The recent Federal Communications Commission deregulation of many aspects of radio station programmi...
In 1996, Congress passed the Telecommunications Act which increased the proportion of the national t...
(Excerpt) By enacting the Telecommunications Act of 19961, Congress mandated large-scale deregulatio...
The deregulation of the radio industry started, not in 1980 with the Reagan administration, but in 1...
Part I traces the history of broadcast regulation, emphasizing the development of the scarcity doctr...
Part I traces the history of broadcast regulation, emphasizing the development of the scarcity doctr...
Part I traces the history of broadcast regulation, emphasizing the development of the scarcity doctr...
Mega-owners in the radio regime became possible with the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which radi...
The FCC has regulated the ownership structure of the broadcasting industry in order to protect the p...
In 1996, Congress increased the limits on how many radio stations one firm can own within a single ...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 eliminated nationwide radio ownership restrictions and liberalize...
The 1996 Telecommunications Act has forever transformed the regulatory landscape. The Act contemplat...
In this paper I theoretically and empirically study the effects of radio ownership structure on reve...
(Excerpt) By enacting the Telecommunications Act of 19961, Congress mandated large-scale deregulatio...
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 represented an enormous experimental step towards deregulating th...
The recent Federal Communications Commission deregulation of many aspects of radio station programmi...
In 1996, Congress passed the Telecommunications Act which increased the proportion of the national t...
(Excerpt) By enacting the Telecommunications Act of 19961, Congress mandated large-scale deregulatio...
The deregulation of the radio industry started, not in 1980 with the Reagan administration, but in 1...
Part I traces the history of broadcast regulation, emphasizing the development of the scarcity doctr...
Part I traces the history of broadcast regulation, emphasizing the development of the scarcity doctr...
Part I traces the history of broadcast regulation, emphasizing the development of the scarcity doctr...