01095nam0-2200289 --450 991024974830332120180118110018.0978-88-6242-064-820180118d2013----kmuy0itay5050 baengitaITabe 001yyRe-enacting the past. Museography for conflict heritageRiattivare il passato. La museografia per l'eredità dei conflittiedited by / a cura di Michela Bassanelli, Gennaro PostiglioneSiracusaLettera ventidue2013447 p.ill.22 cmRiattivare il passatola museografia per l'eredità dei conflittiGuerraSec. 20.Memoria collettivaRuolo [dei] Monumenti commemorativi [e dei] Musei725.9423itaBassanelli,MichelaPostiglione,GennaroITUNINAREICATUNIMARCBK9910249748303321725.94 BAS 1bibl. 2017FLFBCFLFBCRe-enacting the past. Museography for conflict heritage1503875UNINA03531nam 22006134a 450 991045528470332120200520144314.00-262-28058-20-585-29647-2(CKB)111004366633158(SSID)ssj0000227713(PQKBManifestationID)11202674(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000227713(PQKBWorkID)10270368(PQKB)11399869(MiAaPQ)EBC3338433(OCoLC)939263558(OCoLC-P)939263558(MaCbMITP)5579(PPN)055440541(Au-PeEL)EBL3338433(CaPaEBR)ebr2001030(EXLCZ)9911100436663315819991008d1999 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtccrPrivatization, restructuring, and regulation of network utilities[electronic resource] /David M. NewberyCambridge, Mass. MIT Pressc1999xvi, 466 p. illThe Walras-Pareto lectures ;2Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph0-262-14068-3 Includes bibliographical references (p. [439]-452) and index.Network utilities, such as electricity, telephones, and gas, are public utilities that require a fixed network to deliver their services. Because consumers have no choice of network, they risk exploitation by network owners. Once invested, however, a network's capital is sunk, and the bargaining advantage shifts from investor to consumer. The investor, fearing expropriation, may be reluctant to invest. The tension between consumer and investor can be side-stepped by state ownership. Alternatively, private ownership and consumers' political power can be reconciled through regulation. Either way, network utilities operate under terms set by the state. David Newbery argues that price-setting rules comprise only part of the policy agenda. Network utilities pose special problems of ownership and regulation. He discusses the history of ownership and regulation, privatization, and theories of regulation. Examining three network utilities in detail--telecoms, electricity, and gas--he contrasts the regulatory approaches of Britain and the United States. He also looks at liberalization in a variety of other countries. History shows that the mature forms of regulatory institutions are emarkably similar under both public and private ownership. This raises obvious questions such as: Will the forces that caused convergence to regulated vertical integration in the past reassert themselves? Can the benefits of competition be protected against the pressure to reintegrate? Will different utilities differ in their form and structure? A full understanding of the forces shaping regulatory institutions is necessary to answer these important questions.Walras-Pareto lectures ;2.Public utilitiesPrivatizationPublic utilitiesGovernment policyElectronic books.Public utilities.Privatization.Public utilitiesGovernment policy.363.6Newbery David M. G118518MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910455284703321Privatization, restructuring, and regulation of network utilities44518UNINA