- Docente: Daniele Senzani
- Credits: 3
- SSD: IUS/09
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Bologna
- Corso: First cycle degree programme (L) in Electronics and Telecommunications Engineering (cod. 0923)
Learning outcomes
Knowledge of the regulatory schemes relevant to the sctor, as well as of those set by the legal system in the field of telecommunications law.
Course contents
1. Introduction.
- Regulation and legal order. Law, community and social
structures/organisations. State, sovereignty and public power.
legal order subjects and subjective juridical situations.
- National and international legal orders. European Union's legal
order. Economics law production sources.
- Administrative function. Public Administration. Authorities and
regulation Authorities. Administrative acts. Relations between
Public administration and third party. Public Administration
action. Production/supply of goods and general interest services.
Organizational systems: public and private systems. Public and
private companies.
- Evolution of the structure. Technical, economic, social reasons
and the situation of natural monopoly of (some) public services.
Consequences: curtailment of the private economic initiative. The
constitutional foundation. The legal reserve principle.
2. Legal foundations and principal features of
telecommunications regulation.
- Definition of the term telecommunication. Audiovisual field.
Telecommunications and telephony sector.
- Structural features of telecommunications and reasons of national
monopolies. The legal foundations of the institution of monopoly
and its overtaking: economic foundations and technological
innovation outcomes on telecommunications law.
- Legal outlines of telecommunication regulation, in respect to
legal monopoly.
- The relation between telecommunications and freedom rights
constitutionally protected.
3. Supranational telecommunications regulation.
- Effects of European Union's legal order on national legal order.
Substitution of competition principle to legal reserve principle.
Public service and universal service.
- The introduction of competition in the telecommunications sector
by means of regulation (schemes).
- Normative liberalization and opening to the unique market imposed
by EU law.
- EU Treaty principles. Open network provision (ONP) and third
party access (TPA).
- Telecommunications liberalization. Alternative infrastructures to
by cable network.
- Mobile telephony. Liberalization of advanced telecommunications
services and vocal telephony.
- Local Loop market access. Data transmission services and Internet
access supply.
- Normative action and functions of international institutions
(International Telecommunications Union ITU; ETSI).
4. Towards a legal system of electronic communications. National
legal order.
- Consequences of EU telecommunications liberalization on national
regulation. Regulation diversification of telecommunications and
audio-visual transmissions.
- Converging process: electronic communications.
- Sector regulation: Authority, Communications Ministry
competences. Authority role.
- Free market and administrative constraints to firms: individual
licenses and general authorizations. Shrunk procedures to entrust
special licenses (UMTS, etc.).
- Tlc activities regulation. Third party access to infrastructures.
Telecommunications market entrance and exit barriers.
- Tariffs fixing: access and users. Semi-administered rates and
price-cap systems; free rates.
- Nature of electronic communication goods (networks and plants).
Environmental, urban and healthcare problems.
5. The system of radio and television with editorial
contents.
- Audio-visual transmissions with editorial contents
regulation.
- Constitutional principles. Freedom of speech and expression,
freedom of information.
- Integrated communication system (ICS). Problems related to the
normative diversification: electronic communications and
Audio-visual transmissions with editorial contents
regulations.
6. Protection problems affecting the transition to a competitive
electronic communications market.
- Protection of telecommunications competitive market mechanism.
Firms' position.
- EU Commission's and Court's of Justice roles.
- Antitrust Authority's role and judicial protection
instruments.
- Telecommunications market organization during the transit to
competition. Public service and universal service. Universal
service duties.
- Tariffs regulation's limits. Universal service's financing
problems and competition restraints.
- Asymmetric regulation of Tlcs providers.
- Contractual relation between users and Tlc providers. Providers'
liability. Tlcs services charter.
Readings/Bibliography
For students attending the course.
Readings will be recommended during the course.
For non attending students.
a) PEREZ R., Comunicazioni elettroniche, in CARTEI G.,
CHITI M.P., GALETTA D.U., GRECO G., Trattato di diritto
amministrativo europeo, Giuffrè, 2007, Parte speciale, Tomo II, pp.
783-843;
b) GRADINETTI O., Il testo unico dei servizi di media audiovisivi e radiofonici, in Giornale di diritto amministrativo, 2011, fasc. 2, pp. 121 - 133;
c) MULA D., La responsabilità e gli obblighi degli internet provider per violazione del diritto d'autore, in Rivista di diritto industriale, 2010, fasc. 3, pp. 252 - 270.
Teaching methods
Frontal lessons.
Assessment methods
Oral examination aimed to verify the understanding of the regulatory scheme governing the sector.
For students attending lectures, the first exam may be the discussion of a short essay followed by an oral exam.
To attend the exam, each student must sign up via AlmaEsami within the deadline. Those who cannot sign up must immediately (before the official closing of the subscription lists) communicate the problem to the teaching secretariat. Deciding whether to allow not enrolled students to attend the exam or not is up to the teacher.
The teacher will minute the final mark on the date set and indicated in Almaesami.
Teaching tools
Slides.
Office hours
See the website of Daniele Senzani