Canadian Telecommunications Law
- Publisher
- Irwin Law Inc.
- Initial publish date
- Feb 2011
- Category
- Communications, Public Utilities
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781552210550
- Publish Date
- Feb 2011
- List Price
- $75.00
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Description
The area of telecommunications law historically meant the administration and regulation of telecommunications (telegraph and telephone) and broadcasting (radio, television, and cable) under the control of the CRTC and its predecessor agencies. Deregulation brought about immense changes, and since then the media themselves have changed and with them the regulatory focused subject area. Traditional media – telephone (wired and wireless), radio, television, cable, and DTH satellite communications – remain core components, even as they integrate and converge with other media in the milieu of digitization. Yet the nature and breadth of digitization has juxtaposed other areas of law and imbued them with substantial significance and relevance to telecommunications as a whole. This trend is reflected in this important new book by one of Canada's leading specialists in the field.
The book will appeal not only to practitioners and students of telecommunications law but to industry professionals seeking a broader understanding of the legal environment in which they work.
About the author
Robert Howell has taught in the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria, British Columbia, since 1980. He has taught property in the first-year program since that time, but in 1985 he focused his research and primarily taught intellectual property law and policy. The impact of technological change led him to expand his specialization into telecommunications law and policy, and to private international law, initially its linkage with technology and intellectual property but, since 2003, across all dimensions of this subject. Professor Howell has also done research on and taught courses in managing intellectual property and he has presented summer term programs in intellectual property law, including the International Intellectual Property Summer Program from 2002 to 2007, alternating in venue between Victoria and Oxford.
Professor Howell has published nationally and internationally in his areas of specialization and has organized and participated in national and international conferences and seminars. In 1999 he co-authored (with Linda Vincent and Michael Manson) a national coursebook — Intellectual Property Law, Cases and Materials; and in 1998 and 2002 he completed Reports on Database Protection and Canadian Laws for Industry Canada and Canadian Heritage. In 2008, Professor Howell was appointed for a five-year term on the Board of the British Columbia Law Institute, the principal law reform entity in British Columbia.