The deadline for submissions to
the workshop on "The Broadband Act of 2011" has been extended
to July 15th. Please see the following updated call for
submissions:
The recently announced initiative in Congress to update the
Communications Act makes even more relevant the upcoming experts workshop
on “The Broadband Act of 2011: Designing a Communications Act for the
21st Century” (details below). Scholars wishing to
make their voices heard and interested in participating in the national
debate on the future of the Internet and broadband networks are offered
the opportunity to do so through this Workshop. Action by Congress
may supersede the FCC’s proposal to reclassify the regulatory status of
broadband and redefine the scope of the FCC’s authority. This is an
opportunity to provide timely input to policy makers. Submissions
by young scholars and new and diverse voices are particularly
invited. (See:
http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/Congress-Pushing-For-Communications-Act-Rewrite-108571/
)
Call for Paper Proposals
The Broadband Act of 2011:
Designing A Communications Act for the
21st Century
A by-invitation experts workshop
New America Foundation, Washington, DC
September 28-30, 2010
The passage of the National Broadband Plan in March 2010; the heated
debate over Title II reclassification; the ongoing deliberations
regarding the NPRM on Network Neutrality; the Comcast-NBCU merger
proceedings; and the April 2010 Appeals Court decision in Comcast v. FCC,
all point to the need for a comprehensive overhaul of the Communications
Act. The last time such a wide-ranging initiative took place was in 1996.
That effort led to a blueprint for competition in local telephony
markets, universal service reform, and deregulation of media ownership
rules, all of which have had an effect on the structure of the media and
telecommunications industries today. But it barely addressed the
broadband Internet. Now, 15 years later, it is clear that a new legal
framework is required to confront the challenges created by a national
network that is broadband based.
The Institute for Information Policy at Penn State and the Open
Technology Initiative at the New America Foundation are pleased to
announce this Call for Paper Proposals (Abstracts) discussing the
rationale, needed amendments and steps to be taken in order to bring the
Communications Act of 1934 up to date for the broadband era. The selected
papers will be presented and discussed during a three-day by-invitation
experts workshop designed to bring together up to a dozen American and
international experts and to be held at the New America Foundation in
Washington, DC, September 28-30, 2010 with the goal of engaging the
policy and law making community in a dialogue, and then publishing the
papers in an expedited manner.
Suggested paper topics may include, but are not limited to:
· New legal theories for the regulation of
broadband
· Outlining and/or drafting a new section
of the Communication Act
· The need for network neutrality
legislation
· Amendments necessary to achieve universal
broadband
· The role of the government beyond basic
provision of access
· Legal responses to interconnection
reform
· Restructuring the Federal Communications
Commission
· The role of competition among broadband
networks
· A new approach to spectrum
management/regulation
· Copyright legislation in the broadband
era
· Advancing the goals of the National
Broadband Plan
· Any other aspect of the Communications
Act that requires attention at this time of technological
transition
Abstracts of up to 500 words and a short bio of the author(s) should be
submitted to
(pennstateiip /at/ psu.edu) by July
15, 2010. Please write IIPNAFWS: YOUR NAME in the subject line. Accepted
presenters will be notified by August 1, 2010.
*The final structure of the conference as well as financial support to
participants is subject to budget approval.
Amit M. Schejter, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Co-director, Institute for
Information Policy
The
College of Communications
The Pennsylvania State University
Office: 314C Willard
Mail address: 115 Carnegie Building
University Park, PA 16802-5101
http://www.personal.psu.edu/faculty/a/m/ams37/