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Communications Law in the Public Interest

Authors
  • Allen Hammond
  • Catherine Sandoval
  • Leonard Baynes
Series / Aspen Casebook Series
Teaching Materials
NO
Description

Looking through a historical lens, this new casebook examines the evolution of telecommunication law, policy, and technology from the telegraph to the Internet. It examines six key industries: broadcast, cable TV, telephone, satellite, wireless, and the Internet. The book’s novel format begins with introductory chapters analyzing the nature of spectrum and regulation of spectrum-based services and the history and technology that link the regulation of telegraph-to-telephone-to-the-Internet.

This casebook analyzes conceptions of the public interest as defined by statute, case law, and FCC and state decision-making. It contrasts the legal and economic standards used by antitrust law as compared to communications law. It examines telecommunication regulation through the lens of five key concepts: functionality, ownership or licensing, access, speech, and the public interest. The casebook offers projects and hypotheticals that support analysis of issues from the perspective of constitutional, administrative and communications law, as well as statutory issues raised by communications and information technology regulation.

Professors and students will benefit from:

  • A mix of theoretical and practical readings that build understanding of telecommunications technology, law, and regulation.
  • A format friendly to both in-person and online teaching and study. Offering a combination of text, PowerPoint slides, links to video materials, and commentary that can be shared with students or used by the professor, the casebook includes projects students can generate and share through a live or online class.
  • Historical perspective of federal and state communications policy beginning with the creation of the telegraph system, through the evolution and growth of the telephone system, the growth of broadcasting, cable, and satellite, and the growth of the Internet and Internet of Things.
  • Knowledge and skills to recognize and litigate statutory, constitutional, Administrative Procedures Act, and other legal issues.
  • Legislative and regulatory drafting, analysis, and decision-making skills, consistent with legal standards.
  • Case and regulatory analysis, questions and projects that support writing, experiential, or exam-based courses and the production of student papers and presentations.
  • Student skill-building to file comments in FCC and state communications regulatory decision-making dockets, and to file amicus briefs for legal cases.
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About the authors
Catherine Sandoval
Associate Professor
Santa Clara University School of Law

Associate Professor, Santa Clara University School of Law. Professor Sandoval serves as Co- Director of SCU Law’s Broadband Institute of California and High- Tech Law Institute and as the Director of SCU Law’s legal studies program at Oxford University. Professor Sandoval has authored over 12 scholarly articles and book chapters on com­munications, energy, and antitrust law. Her scholarly work and expertise have been cited more than 200 times, including by the FCC, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and the Los Angeles Times. The D.C. Circuit in Mozilla v. FCC (2019) cited Professor Sandoval’s comments to support its remand of the FCC’s 2018 net neutral­ity repeal for the FCC’s failure to address the public safety issues she raised in the record. She served a six- year term as a commissioner of the California Public Utilities Commission, appointed by Governor Brown. For more than five years she served as director and previously as deputy director of the FCC’s Office of Communications Business Opportunities. Professor Sandoval testified to Congress in January 2020 regarding initiatives to increase minority media ownership. She earned a B.A. from Yale University; a Master of Letters from Oxford University, where she was a Rhodes Scholar; and a J.D. from Stanford Law School. & &

Leonard M. Baynes
Professor and Dean
University of Houston

Dean and Professor, University of Houston Law Center. Dean Baynes has authored more than 25 law review articles on corporate law, communications law, and diversity and has been cited approximately 300 times. Professor Baynes was previously a mem­ber of the St. John’s Law School faculty, where he served as director of the Ronald H. Brown Center for Civil Rights. While a faculty member at Western New England University School of Law, Professor Baynes served as a scholar- in- residence at the Federal Communications Commission and worked on communications access and spectrum licensing issues. Dean Baynes has received multiple awards for his com­mitment to the community and service, including awards from the Minority Media & Telecommunications Council Hall of Fame, the New York State Bar Association, the Council on Legal Education Opportunity, Inc., the National Black Pre- Law Conference, and the National Diversity Council. In 2020, Baynes was named to the Lawyers of Color Power List by the Lawyers of Color Foundation. Dean Baynes earned his B.S. at New York University Stern School of Business, his M.B.A. at Columbia Graduate School of Business, and his J.D. at Columbia Law School.

Product Information
Publication date
2020-10-19
Pages
718
Hardcover
9780735570856
Subject
Computer and Cyberlaw , Science, Technology, and the Law
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