Re: Oxford Internet Institute's Public Broadband Inquiry
andrew.ross@new.oxford.ac.uk:
***Open Invitation to Submit Evidence (New Deadline-- 30 July 2002) (...) As its first major initiative, the OII is to establish a committee of inquiry into the public policy issues concerning broadband Internet access in the UK. The costs and benefits of broadband is a complex and pressing issue, complicated by the considerable debate regarding its development and application.
The aim of the inquiry is to comprehensively survey the political, social, legal and economic environment in which broadband operates, both in the UK and abroad, and to develop practical policy recommendations for government.
"Committee of inquiry" usually connotes a government or similarly institutionally-tied official process -- particularly with "invitation to submit evidence", which usually connotes the workings of an administrative tribunal such as, say, a regulatory body. Just to understand, is this a government-tied inquiry -- or does the titling reflect a nomenclature choice aimed at infusing a university-run research project with an explicit political-process vocabulary? thanks Bram
participants (1)
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Bram Dov Abramson