Annemijn van Gorp
Ryerson University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Annemijn van Gorp.
The Information Society | 2009
Carleen F. Maitland; Annemijn van Gorp
Regional economic communities, which are growing in numbers and size, play an increasingly important role in information and communication technology (ICT) policymaking. As seen through the lens of complex adaptive systems theory, such systems should strive to generate adaptive policies through adaptive policymaking processes that position them to respond to rapid technological change. To date, however, regional policymaking has been overly concerned with policy harmonization as an outcome, possibly to the detriment of other important goals. Despite this bias, upon closer examination, one finds that regional communities do foster adaptivity through their roles in the formation of epistemic communities, capacity building, and resource pooling. These activities contribute to variation, interaction, and selection, all key processes for adaptation. It is this degree of adaptivity, and its required balance between policy harmonization and competition, that should be the basis for analyzing the effectiveness of regional policymaking.
Info | 2009
Annemijn van Gorp; Carleen F. Maitland
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to show that, while in many low income countries inefficient regulatory regimes have been blamed for impeding ICT market development, Tanzania constitutes a remarkable exception. This study aims to identify the organizational and contextual factors that have enabled the Tanzanian Communications Regulatory Agency (TCRA) to implement innovative regulations, including a fully converged licensing framework as the first country on the continent, and how subsequently these regulations have influenced market development.Design/methodology/approach – The analysis is based on case study data gathered through 20 face‐to‐face interviews in 2006 as well as secondary data gathered from government documents, news reports and company web sites.Findings – The research finds that the market developments and regulatory innovations were due in part to Tanzanias Communications Regulatory Authority (TCRA)s high level of autonomy, afforded by independent funding mechanisms and lack of c...
information and communication technologies and development | 2009
Annemijn van Gorp; Carleen F. Maitland
This study analyzes the nature of regulatory independence and its influence on wireless market development in Tanzania and Botswana. The study finds that the level of regulatory independence is associated with improved market conditions. The research has implications for theories of regulation and market development in low income countries. In particular the Tanzania case suggests that the independence of regulation can have secondary effects such as diversity of technologies and faster transitions to advanced technologies, while the reversal of independence in Botswana highlights the need for greater insights into the under-theorized dynamic nature of regulatory independence.
Telematics and Informatics | 2010
Annemijn van Gorp; Catherine Middleton
Telecommunications Policy | 2009
Annemijn van Gorp; Carleen F. Maitland
Communications & Strategies | 2010
Annemijn van Gorp; Catherine Middleton
Archive | 2008
Annemijn van Gorp; Louis-Marie Ngamassi Tchouakeu; Carleen Maitland; David J. Saab; Andrea H. Tapia; Edgar Maldonado; Razvan Orendovici; Kang Zhao
Archive | 2009
Catherine Middleton; Annemijn van Gorp
Archive | 2009
Annemijn van Gorp; Catherine Middleton; Ted Rogers
25th European Regional ITS Conference, Brussels 2014 | 2014
Edgar Maldonado; Annemijn van Gorp; Nicolai Pogrebnyakov