Telecommunications Policy
Volume 1 - 49
Current editor(s): Erik Bohlin From Elsevier Bibliographic data for series maintained by Catherine Liu (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 27, issue 10-11
- The theory of access pricing and its linkage with investment incentives pp. 659-675

- Tommaso Valletti
- Regulation and investment behaviour in the telecommunications sector: policies and patterns in US and Europe pp. 677-699

- Hsihui Chang, Heli Koski and Sumit K Majumdar
- Investment strategies in the Netherlands pp. 701-715

- Hendrik Rood and R. A. te Velde
- How access pricing and entry interact pp. 717-727

- Martin Cave and Ingo Vogelsang
- On access pricing in telecoms: theory and European practice pp. 729-740

- Martin Peitz
Volume 27, issue 8-9
- Competition issues on access to databases for the provision of directory information services in the EU pp. 563-583

- Paul Richards
- On the impotence of imputation pp. 585-595

- Thomas Beard, David L. Kaserman and John Mayo
- Comparing internet and mobile phone usage: digital divides of usage, adoption, and dropouts pp. 597-623

- Ronald E. Rice and James E. Katz
- Vertical structure of the industry and competition: an analysis of the evolution of the info-communications industry pp. 625-649

- Jackie Krafft
Volume 27, issue 7, 2003
- Liberalizing US spectrum allocation pp. 485-499

- Thomas W. Hazlett
- The long and winding road: the FCC paves the path with good intentions pp. 501-515

- Gregory L. Rosston
- Next generation frequency coordinator pp. 517-525

- Coleman Bazelon
- Legal and regulatory issues regarding spectrum rights trading pp. 527-532

- Michele C. Farquhar and Ari Q. Fitzgerald
- A secondary market for the trading of spectrum: promoting market liquidity pp. 533-541

- Mark Bykowsky
- Liberating the radio spectrum in Guatemala pp. 543-554

- Giancarlo Ibarguen
Volume 27, issue 5-6
- Standards in wireless telephone networks pp. 325-332

- Neil Gandal, David Salant and Leonard Waverman
- Brazilian strategy on mobile spectrum pp. 333-350

- José Leite Pereira-Filho
- Wireless Internet access: 3G vs. WiFi? pp. 351-370

- William Lehr and Lee W. McKnight
- India's experiments in mobile licensing pp. 371-382

- Stephen D. McDowell and Jenghoon Lee
- On the design and implementation of the GSM auction in Nigeria--the world's first ascending clock spectrum auction pp. 383-405

- Chris Doyle and Paul McShane
- Lessons from the Nigerian GSM auction pp. 407-416

- Darin Lee
- Impact of license fees on the prices of mobile voice service pp. 417-434

- Johannes M. Bauer
- Should we regulate any aspects of wireless? pp. 435-455

- Annegret Groebel
- Going mobile: substitutability between fixed and mobile access pp. 457-476

- Mark Rodini, Michael Ward and Glenn Woroch
Volume 27, issue 3-4
- Deconstructing 3G and reconstructing telecoms pp. 187-206

- John Ure
- Globalization of wireless value system: from geographic to strategic advantages pp. 207-235

- Dan Steinbock
- An exploratory model of inter-country Internet diffusion pp. 237-252

- Richard Beilock and Daniela V. Dimitrova
- Internet use in rural and remote Western Australia pp. 253-266

- Gary Madden and Grant Coble-Neal
- Foreign investment policies, sovereignty and growth pp. 267-282

- Georgette Wang
- Telecommunications policy learning: the case of the FCC's computer inquiries pp. 283-299

- Michael J. Zarkin
- Tariff-quality equilibrium and its implications for telecommunications regulation pp. 301-315

- Xu Yan and James Y. L. Thong
Volume 27, issue 1-2
- Self-destructive competition in cellular: regulatory options to harness the benefits of liberalisation pp. 11-19

- Muriuki Mureithi
- Tele-centres as a way of achieving universal access--the case of Ghana pp. 21-39

- Morten Falch and Amos Anyimadu
- Telecommunications in developing countries: reflections from the South African experience pp. 41-59

- Gertrude Makhaya and Simon Roberts
- Internet subscription in Africa: policy for a dual digital divide pp. 61-74

- Trevor R. Roycroft and Siriwan Anantho
- The need for a systems thinking approach to the planning of rural telecommunications infrastructure pp. 75-93

- T. N. Andrew and D. Petkov
- Telecommunications reform in Southern Africa: the role of the Southern African Development Community pp. 95-108

- P. K. McCormick
- Are main lines and mobile phones substitutes or complements? Evidence from Africa pp. 109-133

- Jacqueline Hamilton
- Governing global information and communications policy:: Emergent regime formation and the impact on Africa pp. 135-153

- Derrick L. Cogburn
- African information revolution: a balance sheet pp. 155-177

- Ernest J. Wilson and Kelvin Wong
Volume 26, issue 11, 2002
- Comparing the operational efficiency of the main European telecommunications organizations: A quantitative analysis pp. 595-606

- G. C. Pentzaropoulos and D. I. Giokas
- 'Double marginalization' problems: evidence from the Korean fixed-to-mobile service market pp. 607-621

- Myeong-Cheol Park and Sang-Woo Lee
- Can information and communication technologies be pro-poor? pp. 623-646

- Emmanuel Forestier, Jeremy Grace and Charles Kenny
Volume 26, issue 9-10
- Deconstruction of the telecommunications industry: from value chains to value networks pp. 451-472

- Feng Li and Jason Whalley
- Mapping the evolving telecoms industry: the uses and shortcomings of the layer model pp. 473-483

- Martin Fransman
- The European market for mobile data: evolving value chains and industry structures pp. 485-504

- Carleen F. Maitland, Johannes M. Bauer and Rudi Westerveld
- The evolving mobile wireless value chain and market structure pp. 505-535

- Hemant Kumar Sabat
- Mobile virtual network operators: a strategic transaction cost analysis of preliminary experiences pp. 537-549

- Svein Ulset
- A value chain model for mobile data service providers pp. 551-571

- Phillip Olla and Nandish V. Patel
- For whom the bell alternatives toll: demographics of residential facilities-based telecommunications competition in the United States pp. 573-587

- R. Dean Foreman
Volume 26, issue 7-8
- Spatial dimensions of Internet activity pp. 363-387

- Tony Grubesic
- Fixed and fluid: stability and change in the geography of the Internet pp. 389-413

- Sean P. Gorman and Edward J. Malecki
- The competitive effects of resale versus facility-based entry: evidence from the long-distance market pp. 415-424

- David L. Kaserman and Marc Ulrich
- Revenge of the Bellheads: how the Netheads lost control of the Internet pp. 425-444

- Rob Frieden
Volume 26, issue 5-6
- Corporate governance in the deregulated telecommunications industry: lessons from the airline industry pp. 225-242

- Kenneth Lehn
- Privatization and the sources of performance improvement in the global telecommunications industry pp. 243-268

- Bernardo Bortolotti, Juliet D'Souza, Marcella Fantini and William L. Megginson
- Mergers, acquisitions and control of telecommunications firms in Europe pp. 269-286

- Francesc Trillas
- Capital subsidies, profit maximization, and acquisitions by partially privatized telecommunications carriers pp. 287-294

- J. Gregory Sidak
- "Open access:" the ideal and the real pp. 295-310

- George Bittlingmayer and Thomas W. Hazlett
- Network effects and merger analysis: instant messaging and the AOL-Time Warner case pp. 311-333

- Gerald Faulhaber
- From sector-specific regulation to antitrust law for US telecommunications: the prospects for transition pp. 335-355

- Howard A. Shelanski
Volume 26, issue 3-4
- A commentary on standardization practices: lessons from the NMT and GSM mobile telephone standards histories pp. 101-107

- Thomas Haug
- Standardisation in the construction of a large technological system--the case of the Nordic mobile telephone system pp. 109-127

- Janne Lehenkari and Reijo Miettinen
- Technological systems and competent procurers--the transformation of Nokia and the Finnish telecom industry revisited? pp. 129-148

- Christopher Palmberg
- Achieving high momentum in the evolution of wireless infrastructures: the battle over the 1G solutions pp. 149-170

- Kalle Lyytinen and Vladislav V. Fomin
- Intellectual property rights and standardization: the case of GSM pp. 171-188

- Rudi Bekkers, Bart Verspagen and Jan Smits
- Ma Bell's orphan: US cellular telephony, 1947-1996 pp. 189-203

- John Leslie King and Joel West
- De-facto standardization through alliances--lessons from Bluetooth pp. 205-213

- Thomas Keil
Volume 26, issue 1-2
- Can the US transition to digital TV be fixed? Some lessons from two European Union cases pp. 3-15

- Hernan Galperin
- Product cycle theory and telecommunications industry--foreign direct investment, government policy, and indigenous manufacturing in China pp. 17-30

- Zixiang Alex Tan
- Information-communications technologies (ICT) and transport: does knowledge underpin policy? pp. 31-52

- Galit Cohen, Ilan Salomon and Peter Nijkamp
- Pricing network elements when costs are changing pp. 53-67

- David Mandy
- The rise of the Australian Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman pp. 69-85

- Anita Stuhmcke
- A new view of telecommunications economics pp. 87-92

- James Alleman
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