Vol. 61 No. 1, December 2008
Index
- Editor's note.
- The enduring lessons of the breakup of AT&T: a twenty-five year retrospective.
- The decline and fall of AT&T: a personal recollection.
- The Bell System divestiture: background, implementation, and outcome.
- An oligopoly analysis of AT&T's performance in the wireline long-distance markets after divestiture.
- Will access regulation work?
- Toward a unified theory of access to local telephone networks.
- Did AT&T die in vain? An empirical comparison of AT&T and Bell Canada.
- Essential facilities and Trinko: should antitrust and regulation be combined?
- The AT&T consent decree: in praise of interconnection only.
- Reexamining the legacy of dual regulation: reforming dual merger review by the DOJ and the FCC.
- Are regulators forward-looking? The market price of copper versus the regulated price of mandatory access to unbundled local loops in telecommunications networks.
- "Fleeting expletives" are the tip of the iceberg: fallout from exposing the arbitrary and capricious nature of indecency regulation.
- Leave me alone! The delicate balance of privacy and commercial speech in the evolving do-not-call registry.