Renowned advocate and legal trailblazer Peter S. Grant has acted for –
and against – virtually all of the major players in the Canadian
broadcast and telecommunications industry. His résumé features stints as
a rapporteur for UNESCO, Special Counsel for the CRTC, Broadcasting
Arbitrator for Canada’s political parties, and advocate for the underdog
in the David-and-Goliath struggle to expand Canada’s culture
industries.
In his sweeping memoir, Changing Channels: Confessions of a Canadian Communications Lawyer,
Grant affords readers an insider’s glimpse into some of the biggest
changes in the history of Canadian communications policy. Interspersed
with fond recollections of his hometown of Kapuskasing and anecdotes of
his growing family, Grant provides an eye-opening account of the
Canadian communications industries. He documents his role in regulating
the telecom carriers, increasing competition among service providers,
and acting for dozens of broadcast programming services in front of the
CRTC.
Grant’s reasoned prose highlights his far-reaching expertise in all
areas of communications law and cultural policy, and makes his story
compelling to anyone who has picked up a phone or turned on a television
set.