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University of Texas Research and Publications on Media Policy

The University of Texas has a variety of different sources for research and policy work on media issues, including the L.B.J. School of Public Affairs, The College of Communication's Department of Radio-Television-Film, and the School of Information. Below are links to just a few examples of this research.


Telecommunications and Information Policy Institute

Prof. Gary Chapman, Senior Lecturer, LBJ School of Public Affairs: Missing Links: Lessons on the Digital Divide from Texas Telecommunications Infrastructure Fund

Dr. Martha Fuentes-Bautista, Ph.D. in Radio, Television and Film, College of Communication: Reconfiguring Public Access in the Post-Convergence Era: The Social Construction of Public Access to New Media in Austin, TX

Karen Gustafson, Ph.D. in Radio, Television, and Film: Deregulation and the Market in Public Disclosure: The AT&T Divestiture, The 1996 Telecommunications Act, and the Development of a Commercial Internet

Amy Jo Larsen, Masters in Public Affairs, LBJ School of Public Affairs: Media Reform and Social Movements: Acting Together in the Public Interest

Dr. Laura Stein, Assistant Professor, Department of Radio, Television, and Film, College of Communication: Access Television and Grassroots Activism in the U.S.; The Future of Openness on the Internet; New Global Media and Communication Policy: the Role of the State in the Twenty-First Century; Speech Without Rights: the Status of Public Space on the Internet

Dr. Sharon Strover, Professor and Department Chair, Department of Radio, Television, and Film, College of Communication: Innovations in Rural Telecommunications Policy: The State and Local Levels; Urban Telecommunications: The Policy Planner's Dilemma

Felice Trigoff: Masters in Public Affairs, LBJ School of Public Affairs: Digital TV Transition

Dana Williams, Masters in Public Affairs, LBJ School of Public Affairs: Texas Telecommunications Deregulation: Its Effects and Its Future

Angie Yowell: Masters in Public Affairs, LBJ School of Public Affairs: Net Neutrality: Safeguarding the Internet's Democratic Potential
 

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