Dimensions of cooperative spectrum sharing: Rights and enforcement

Sharing of radio spectrum requires a careful and nuanced understanding of the rights of incumbents and spectrum entrants. In addition, the dynamics of stakeholders can be understood by examining how various rights are arranged (and rearranged) among them. Importantly, understanding the rights and their distribution is the predicate to developing rational and useful enforcement approaches. In this paper, we show that spectrum sharing involves a rearrangement of the rights associated with radio spectrum among stakeholders. We show how this rearrangement of rights implies the definition of new bundles of rights, appropriate to each particular sharing scenario. We discover these rights - and their (re)arrangement - by examining several cases of spectrum use. We begin with the rights associated with exclusive use and proceed to consider rights arrangement in commons and different spectrum sharing configurations. Further, in the case of commons, we explicitly examine how governance of commons can affect the rights distribution in spectrum. In each case, the bundles of rights associated with each stakeholder changes. New bundles of rights have consequences, not only on the behavior of spectrum users but also on the enforcement process. Our examination of the bundles of rights shows that each rearrangement results in different approaches to enforcement. We demonstrate this by revisiting enforcement in the cases we examine.

[1]  Roy D. Yates,et al.  Mobile Network Resource Sharing Options: Performance Comparisons , 2013, IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications.

[2]  Martin B. H. Weiss,et al.  Enforcement and Spectrum Sharing: Case Studies of Federal-Commercial Sharing , 2013 .

[3]  Linda Doyle,et al.  Cellular clouds , 2013 .

[4]  Robert J. Matheson,et al.  The Technical Basis for Spectrum Rights: Policies to Enhance Market Efficiency , 2011 .

[5]  J.P. De Vries,et al.  De-Situating Spectrum: Rethinking Radio Policy Using Non-Spatial Metaphors , 2008, 2008 3rd IEEE Symposium on New Frontiers in Dynamic Spectrum Access Networks.

[6]  Gérard Roland,et al.  Markets and Hierarchies , 2016 .

[7]  Jon M. Peha,et al.  Sharing Spectrum Through Spectrum Policy Reform and Cognitive Radio , 2009, Proceedings of the IEEE.

[8]  Henry E. Smith Exclusion versus Governance: Two Strategies for Delineating Property Rights , 2002, The Journal of Legal Studies.

[9]  Steven Shavell,et al.  The Optimal Structure of Law Enforcement , 1993, The Journal of Law and Economics.

[10]  J. P. De Vries,et al.  De-Situating Spectrum: Rethinking Radio Policy Using Non-Spatial Metaphors , 2008 .

[11]  Martin B. H. Weiss,et al.  Enforcement and spectrum sharing: A case study of the 1695–1710 MHz band , 2013, 8th International Conference on Cognitive Radio Oriented Wireless Networks.

[12]  Kristen Woyach,et al.  Why the caged cognitive radio sings , 2011, 2011 IEEE International Symposium on Dynamic Spectrum Access Networks (DySPAN).

[13]  Martin B. H. Weiss,et al.  Sensing as a Service: An Exploration into Practical Implementations of DSA , 2010, 2010 IEEE Symposium on New Frontiers in Dynamic Spectrum (DySPAN).

[14]  H. Demsetz Toward a Theory of Property Rights , 1967 .

[15]  Gregory L. Rosston,et al.  Interconnection and the Internet: Selected Papers from the 1996 Telecommunications Policy Research Conference , 1997 .

[16]  Martin B. H. Weiss,et al.  Enforcement in Dynamic Spectrum Access Systems , 2012 .

[17]  Kaleb A. Sieh,et al.  The Three Ps: Increasing concurrent operation by unambiguously defining and delegating radio rights , 2011, 2011 IEEE International Symposium on Dynamic Spectrum Access Networks (DySPAN).

[18]  Martin B. H. Weiss,et al.  Market Based Approaches for Dynamic Spectrum Assignment , 2009 .

[19]  B. Freyens,et al.  Emerging issues in white space regulation , 2013 .

[20]  Liu Cui,et al.  Spectrum trading with interference rights , 2012, 2012 7th International ICST Conference on Cognitive Radio Oriented Wireless Networks and Communications (CROWNCOM).

[21]  Martin Cave,et al.  The unfinished history of usage rights for spectrum , 2011, 2011 IEEE International Symposium on Dynamic Spectrum Access Networks (DySPAN).

[22]  P. Lawson,et al.  Federal Communications Commission , 2004, Bell Labs Technical Journal.

[23]  L. Cranor,et al.  Rethinking Rights and Regulations: Institutional Responses to New Communications Technologies , 2003 .

[24]  Thomas W. Hazlett,et al.  The Rationality of U.S. Regulation of the Broadcast Spectrum in the 1934 Communications Act , 1990, Review of Industrial Organization.

[25]  R. Coase,et al.  The Problem of Social Cost , 1960, The Journal of Law and Economics.

[26]  A. D. Vany,et al.  A Property System for Market Allocation of the Electromagnetic Spectrum: A Legal-Economic-Engineering Study , 1969 .

[27]  Ronald H. Coase,et al.  The Federal Communications Commission , 1959, The Journal of Law and Economics.

[28]  Christian Sandvig Spectrum Miscreants, Vigilantes, and Kangaroo Courts: The Return of the Wireless Wars , 2011 .