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Necessary Knowledge for Communications Policy: Information Asymmetries and Commercial Data Access and Usage in the Policymaking Process.

Journal Article

Philip M. Napoli
59
2

Topic(s) of work
FCC, Access to knowledge, Fair Use / Users' Rights, Data rights

Abstract

This Article considers the implications of the prominence of commercial data in the communications policymaking process. Specifically, this Article considers the kinds of imbalances in policy advocacy and policy decision making that may be created by unequal access to these important data sources by the various stakeholders involved in the policymaking process. Drawing upon theoretical and empirical work related to information asymmetries and knowledge utilization, this Article argues that the contemporary communications policymaking environment is one in which the disparity in resources across various stakeholder groups is amplified by the associated imbalances in access to the commercial data
sources that are increasingly central to policy decision making and to persuasive policy advocacy. This Article therefore proposes a number of solutions to correct this imbalance and thereby reduce the information asymmetries that characterize contemporary communications policy analysis and policy advocacy.


Online Availability

Federal Communications Law Journal
Resource Link
Donald McGannon Communication Research Center
Resource Link

Institutional affiliations


Linked from lists:
Resources on Access to Data