The Regulatory Management of Privatised Public Utilities
Details
This book adopts a network theory approach to elaborating regulatory processes for telecommunications in Egypt. In particular, it suggests networks can capture the change from an integrated system of regulation of provision to one of interaction between stakeholders from across the public and private sectors and non-linearity in regulatory developments. This is essential for describing the transformation of the regulatory system in Egypt, which has not followed a process of top-down change but rather has responded to multiple sources of pressure. A combination of qualitative and formal network analytical techniques was used to examine the case of the telecommunications sector in Egypt. Based on empirical data collected from 44 interviews with different stakeholders the regulatory process and regulatory developments in this sector have been investigated in order to illustrate the consequences of the liberalisation process on the regulatory process and the way in which regulations are made and enforced. Formal network analysis has been conducted to map-out and visualise the changes in the network structure and to measure the properties of the studied networks.
Autorentext
Dr. Ahmed Badran is a lecturer in Public Policy and Public Administration at the School of Economics and Political Science, Cairo University. He has completed his PhD at the University of Exeter, UK, and worked as a Post-Doctoral research Fellow in Aston Centre for Critical Infrastructure and Services at Aston University, Birmingham.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09783639367959
 - Sprache Englisch
 - Genre Recht
 - Größe H220mm x B150mm x T18mm
 - Jahr 2011
 - EAN 9783639367959
 - Format Kartonierter Einband (Kt)
 - ISBN 978-3-639-36795-9
 - Titel The Regulatory Management of Privatised Public Utilities
 - Autor Ahmed Badran
 - Untertitel A Network Perspective on the Regulatory Process in the Egyptian Telecommunications Market
 - Gewicht 457g
 - Herausgeber VDM Verlag
 - Anzahl Seiten 296