Beteiligte: | , , , |
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veröffentlicht: | Bern : Peter Lang AG International Academic Publishers, 2014. ©2014. |
Medientyp: | Buch, E-Book |
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Umfang: | 1 online resource (230 pages) |
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ISBN: |
9783035107449
|
Ausgabe: | 180th ed. |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Schlagwörter: | |
Print version:: | Balbi, Gabriele, Network Neutrality, Bern : Peter Lang AG International Academic Publishers,c2014 |
Kollektion: | E-Books adlr |
This book analyses with new sources the early history of the Telegraph Union (today the International Telecommunication Union) and focuses on the key role - political, diplomatic, economic and technical - played by Switzerland in favouring its birth and master-minding its structures during the ten years preceding and following its creation (1855-1875). |
Cover Contents Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter 1 - Switzerland takes on Telecommunications. The politics, economics, technology and society of the period Introduction 1.1 The beginnings of telecommunications in Switzerland 1.2 Federalism and democracy 1.3 Neutrality and defence 1.4 Geography and international relations 1.5 Liberalism and telecommunications 1.6 Foreign trade 1.7 Radicalism and telecommunications 1.8 Know-how and technical elite 1.9 National and international interests Chapter 2 - "Bringing Together the Two Large Electric Currents Dividing Europe" (1849-1865) Introduction 2.1 Bilateral conventions 2.2 The Austro-German Union 2.3 The Western European Union 2.4 En route to convergence 2.5 Paris 1855: the birth of WETU 2.6 Turin 1857: the invite to Austria 2.7 Stuttgart 1857 and Brussels 1858 2.8 Bern 1858: an attempt to clone Stuttgart 2.9 Friedrichshafen 1858: Switzerland holding the balance 2.10 Bregenz 1863: a European Union in view 2.11 Switzerland's solutions 2.12 Diplomacy and imbroglio in the 1850s and 1860s Chapter 3 - The Birth of the Telegraph Union: the 1865 Paris Conference Introduction 3.1 Austria's presence 3.2 The Federal Council calls the tune 3.3 Louis Curchod emerging 3.4 Switzerland scores 3.5 Switzerland beefs up Chapter 4 - The 1868 Vienna Conference Introduction 4.1 A special agent for international telegraphy 4.2 Challet-Venel decodes Curchod 4.3 The anti-dumping regulation 4.4 The debate over the Bureau 4.5 Swiss reactions 4.6 Organization and ambiguity Chapter 5 - Towards Rome Conference: Moves and Counter-moves (1868-1872) Introduction 5.1 Replacing Curchod 5.2 The Bureau as a peacemaker 5.3 Briefing the Swiss delegate(s) for Rome. 5.4 The German move to snaffle the Bureau 5.5 The Germans at work 5.6 The Bureau left in Swiss hands 5.7 Swiss reactions Chapter 6 - The "Bureau"cratisation of the Telegraph Union: St Petersburg (1875) Introduction 6.1 Continuity and change 6.2 Curchod mentoring the Russian delegate 6.3 The Bureau-cratic system 6.4 The separation of the ways 6.5 The Bureau as a Swiss body Conclusion References. |