ITU Radio Regulations

"Radio Regulations" redirects here. For Radio regulation in the United States, see Radio regulation in the United States.
Basic data
Short title: ITU Radio Regulations
Long title: Radio Regulations of the
International Telecommunication Union
Type: Treaty
Legal status: International law
Jurisdiction: international
Abbreviation: RR
Treaty countries: ca. 200
Announcement: December 22, 1992
Actual version: "Geneva, 2015 (WRC-15)"

The ITU Radio Regulations (short: RR) regulates on law of nations scale radiocommunication services and the utilisation of radio frequencies. It is the supplementation to the Constitution and Convention of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU Constitution and Convention). In line to the ITU Constitution and Convention and the ITU International Telecommunication Regulations (ITR), this ITU Radio Regulations belong to the basic documents of the International Telecommunication Union. The ITU Radio Regulations comprise and regulate the part of the allocated electromagnetic spectrum (also: radio frequency spectrum) from 9 kHz to 275 GHz.

Structure

The actual approved version of the ITU Radio Regulations (addition 2012) is structured as follows:

Volume 1 – Articles

Volume 2 – Appendices
Volume 3 – Resolutions and Recommendations
Volume 4 – ITU-R Recommendations incorporated by reference
Maps to be used in relation to Appendix 27

Definitions

The Radio Regulations define:

The drafting, revision and adoption of the Radio Regulations is the responsibility of the World Radiocommunication Conferences (WRCs) of the ITU, meetings of which are typically held every three or four years. Recent WRCs are:

The most recent published version[1] of the Radio Regulations, the "Edition of 2012" contains the complete texts of the Radio Regulations as adopted and revised by WRC-12, including all articles, appendices, resolutions, and a subset of the recommendations issued by ITU-R (previously known as the CCIR) (those "recommendations" which have a mandatory nature, as a result of being cited in the Radio Regulations).

References

External links

National and Regional Radio Regulatory Agencies

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 27, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.