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Master Switch is an approachable book and offers some interesting historical accounts. But it's definitely a book intended for a mass audience that embodies Wu's particular take on the whole industry. The major weakness of the book is that, as a sacrifice to the narrative format, it gives insufficient weight to a major aspect of the whole story: how telecom regulation is shaped by contemporary trends in economics and the economics of regulation.

I'd recommend your second read after Master Switch to be a proper textbook in telecom regulation, for a more detached take. My (quite biased--I know one of the authors) recommendation: http://www.cap-press.com/pdf/2322.pdf.

Your third read should be Khan's "The Economics of Regulation" http://www.amazon.com/The-Economics-Regulation-Principles-In..., which puts the whole field into the larger context of the economic theories in play and how those theories have been applied to various regulatory and deregulatory efforts.



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