Convergence and privatisation in Telecommunications «Regulation of access to limited resources in telecommunications sector in Europe»

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenAufsätze in KonferenzbändenForschungbegutachtet

Standard

Convergence and privatisation in Telecommunications «Regulation of access to limited resources in telecommunications sector in Europe». / Smith, Lesley Jane; Levy, Kate.
International Astronautical Federation - 56th International Astronautical Congress 2005. International Astronautical Foundation IAF, 2005. S. 7157-7166.

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenAufsätze in KonferenzbändenForschungbegutachtet

Harvard

Smith, LJ & Levy, K 2005, Convergence and privatisation in Telecommunications «Regulation of access to limited resources in telecommunications sector in Europe». in International Astronautical Federation - 56th International Astronautical Congress 2005. International Astronautical Foundation IAF, S. 7157-7166.

APA

Smith, L. J., & Levy, K. (2005). Convergence and privatisation in Telecommunications «Regulation of access to limited resources in telecommunications sector in Europe». In International Astronautical Federation - 56th International Astronautical Congress 2005 (S. 7157-7166). International Astronautical Foundation IAF.

Vancouver

Smith LJ, Levy K. Convergence and privatisation in Telecommunications «Regulation of access to limited resources in telecommunications sector in Europe». in International Astronautical Federation - 56th International Astronautical Congress 2005. International Astronautical Foundation IAF. 2005. S. 7157-7166

Bibtex

@inbook{1b0d305acc5948d2a801f0e89d1d9793,
title = "Convergence and privatisation in Telecommunications «Regulation of access to limited resources in telecommunications sector in Europe»",
abstract = "Access to frequencies on the radio spectrum is vital to any private telecommunications operator. The radio spectrum and usable frequencies are considered limited natural resources and, as such, their assignment is highly regulated at international, regional and national level. In light of the liberalisation of the telecommunications market in Europe and its opening up to competition, it has become evident that preferential or unfair access to this limited resource may distort competition, contrary to principles of EC competition rules.. The European Union has approached this problem by establishing that regulation of the spectrum should fall, at national level, on the independent National Regulatory Authority. This authority must ensure that radio frequencies are assigned according to objective, non-discriminatory and transparent procedures. However, while community-wide harmonisation appears to ensure equality of access to all actors entering the market, recent cases have illustrated the inherent weakness of new operators seeking access to spectrum or numbering resources, compared to those pre-existing operators, who may already have gained considerable access to these resources under the old regime. This paper shall examine the struggle to ensure fair competition in regulating access to these resources.",
keywords = "Law",
author = "Smith, {Lesley Jane} and Kate Levy",
year = "2005",
month = oct,
language = "English",
isbn = "9781604236484",
pages = "7157--7166",
booktitle = "International Astronautical Federation - 56th International Astronautical Congress 2005",
publisher = "International Astronautical Foundation IAF",
address = "Canada",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Convergence and privatisation in Telecommunications «Regulation of access to limited resources in telecommunications sector in Europe»

AU - Smith, Lesley Jane

AU - Levy, Kate

PY - 2005/10

Y1 - 2005/10

N2 - Access to frequencies on the radio spectrum is vital to any private telecommunications operator. The radio spectrum and usable frequencies are considered limited natural resources and, as such, their assignment is highly regulated at international, regional and national level. In light of the liberalisation of the telecommunications market in Europe and its opening up to competition, it has become evident that preferential or unfair access to this limited resource may distort competition, contrary to principles of EC competition rules.. The European Union has approached this problem by establishing that regulation of the spectrum should fall, at national level, on the independent National Regulatory Authority. This authority must ensure that radio frequencies are assigned according to objective, non-discriminatory and transparent procedures. However, while community-wide harmonisation appears to ensure equality of access to all actors entering the market, recent cases have illustrated the inherent weakness of new operators seeking access to spectrum or numbering resources, compared to those pre-existing operators, who may already have gained considerable access to these resources under the old regime. This paper shall examine the struggle to ensure fair competition in regulating access to these resources.

AB - Access to frequencies on the radio spectrum is vital to any private telecommunications operator. The radio spectrum and usable frequencies are considered limited natural resources and, as such, their assignment is highly regulated at international, regional and national level. In light of the liberalisation of the telecommunications market in Europe and its opening up to competition, it has become evident that preferential or unfair access to this limited resource may distort competition, contrary to principles of EC competition rules.. The European Union has approached this problem by establishing that regulation of the spectrum should fall, at national level, on the independent National Regulatory Authority. This authority must ensure that radio frequencies are assigned according to objective, non-discriminatory and transparent procedures. However, while community-wide harmonisation appears to ensure equality of access to all actors entering the market, recent cases have illustrated the inherent weakness of new operators seeking access to spectrum or numbering resources, compared to those pre-existing operators, who may already have gained considerable access to these resources under the old regime. This paper shall examine the struggle to ensure fair competition in regulating access to these resources.

KW - Law

UR - http://toc.proceedings.com/00393webtoc.pdf

M3 - Article in conference proceedings

SN - 9781604236484

SP - 7157

EP - 7166

BT - International Astronautical Federation - 56th International Astronautical Congress 2005

PB - International Astronautical Foundation IAF

ER -

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