Summary: | This text provides a study of the International Telecommunications Union, one of the UN's specialized agencies, from a political economy perspective. The author argues that global ownership and control of information and communication technologies is one of the foremost strategic issues faced by government and industrial interests. She suggests that the ITU (International Telecommunications Union) has a crucial role to play as a UN specialized agency, but has been largely ignored in the international relations literature. Lee concludes that existing theories of international organisation are both descriptively and conceptually inadequate and unable to explain recent developments in the evolution of the UN specialised agencies.
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