America's Stake in European Telecommunication Policies
By (Author) Alfred L. Thimm
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
26th October 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
384.094
Hardback
272
Changes within European telecommunication systems have been analysed by the author with the purpose of exploring the social, political and economic conditions that will determine the emergence of a new continental communication infrastructure by 1992. Thimm examines the commonly neglected institutional factors that have shaped the different responses of British, French and German political and economic elites to both technological changes and the European Community's telecommunication strategy. The concepts of political economy are applied to explore the views and vested interests of adversaries in the intense struggle over the reform of the telecommunication systems in these key countries. Thimm briefly reviews the historical and political roots of the telecommunication administrations in Great Britain, France and Germany, and the technological and political events that have undermined existing institutions. He emphasises the national importance of telecommunication as a strategic industry and its vital role as an integral part of the integrated European infrastructure. He considers the strategic role of technical standards as a device that simultaneously "harmonises" European networks and serves as a marketing obstacle to non-European enterprises. The winners and losers in the struggle to adapt European telecom policy to new technological and political conditions are clearly identified.
ALFRED L. THIMM is a Professor of Management at the University of Vermont. Over the past twenty years he has frequently been affiliated as a visiting professor with the University of Munich, Institut fur Organization and the Wirtschaftsuniversitat, Institut fur Organization in Vienna. An international consultant, he is the author of many scholarly articles and five books, including Economists and Society (with J. Finkelstein) 1973, Entscheidungstheorie (with E. Witte) 1976, and The False Promise of Codetermination 1980.