No. 1-2, January 2009
Index
- Editorial.
- Editorial.
- Editorial.
- Editorial.
- Editorial.
- Editorial.
- FIFA signs historic agreement with INTERPOL.
- Article 82 EC and sporting 'conflict of interest': the judgment in MOTOE.
- Gambling-led corruption in international sport: an Australian perspective.
- International sporting event bid processes, and how they can be improved.
- Sporting nationality: remarks on the relationship between the general legal nationality of a person and his 'sporting nationality' *.
- The 'official statement from WADA on the Vrijman report': unintentional proof to the contrary?
- The Olivier Bernard case: how, if at all, to fix compensation for training young players?
- The white paper on sport as an exercise in 'better regulation'.
- Character sports merchandising: international legal issues: the legal and practical ways and means of protecting the subject matter in the UK, the rest of Europe and internationally.
- Gambling related match-fixing: a terminal threat to the integrity of sport?
- Players' agents: past, present ... future?
- The EU commission's white paper on sport: an official coherent, yet debated entrance of the commission in the Sports Arena.
- Baseball's doping crisis and new anti-doping program.
- Proportionality in the world anti-doping code: is there enough room for flexibility?
- Practice makes perfect: an analysis of the world anti-doping code 2009.
- The 'Chambre Arbitrale du Sport' (CAS): a new body for dispute settlement in French sport.
- Public viewing in Germany: Infront guidelines and the German Copyright Act.
- Introduction.
- Sports governing bodies and leveraging of power: what is the appropriate governance model?
- The application of criminal law on doping infractions and the 'whereabouts information' rule: state regulation v self-regulation.
- The CAS appeal decision in the Andrew Webster case.
- One size fits all? Challenging the notion of a uniform EC sports law.
- One step forward, two hops backwards: quotas-the return: an excavation into the legal deficiencies of the FIFA 6+5 rule and the UEFA home-grown players rule in the eyes of the European union law.
- Sports people's right to defence under the new Spanish anti-doping law. A perspective.
- Criminalization of trade and trafficking in doping substances in the European Union.
- The international supply of sports agent services.
- The Webster case: justified panic as there was after Bosman?
- On the front foot against corruption.
- Adaptation of doping regulations to new WADA standard.
- The prize for freedom of movement: the Webster case.
- The unilateral extension option through the eyes of FIFA DRC and CAS.
- The organization of sports in France.
- The UEFA, the "home-grown player rule" and the Meca-Medina judgement of the European court of justice.
- Sailing away from judicial interference: arbitrating the America's Cup.
- The unrepresentative and discriminatory governance structure of cycling.
- The training compensation system.
- The Council of Europe and sport.
- Sport governance in Portugal.
- European sports law: collected papers.
- Transnational sports law.
- Regulations 5.3 and 5.4 of the FIFA regulations on the status and transfer of players: a case study before the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
- Legal regulation of organization and holding of the Olympic Games in the Russian Federation.
- Will the new WADA code plug all the gaps? Will there be by-catch?
- Image rights: the Albanian perspective.
- Is there such a thing as EU sports law?
- Regulating players' agents: a global perspective.
- Sports image rights in Bulgaria.
- Treaty on the functioning of the European Union - state aid and sporting legacy facilities within the European Union.
- A comparative analysis between sports regulations and Italian criminal law in the light of the events of Torino 2006.
- Spear-tackles and sporting conspiracies: recent developments in tort liability for foul play.
- Towards a typology of (international) comparative sports law (research).
- Analyzing the new world anti-doping code: a different perspective.
- Players' agents and the regulatory framework on corruption in International sports law.
- The Laurent Piau case of the ECJ on the Status of Players' Agents.
- Sports image rights in Estonia.
- Image rights in top sport in Hungary.
- Evaluating recent developments in the governance and regulation of South African sport: some thoughts and concerns for the future.
- The policy issue concerning the choice of method to deal with doping.
- Sports image rights in Lithuania.
- France.
- Specific tax exemption regulations for major sports events: example of London Olympic and Paralympic Games.
- An innovative system for resolving disputes in sport (only in sport?).
- Labour law in South African sport: a season of expectations?
- Sports image rights in Romania.
- Lex sportiva and Lex Mercatoria.
- Germany.
- Intellectual property rights in basketball.
- Player's agents in Norway.
- Sports image rights in Slovenia.
- Anti-doping law in South Africa--the challenges of the World Anti-Doping Code.
- Legal problems of the Olympic Movement.
- Tickets, policy and social inclusion: can the European White Paper on Sport deliver?
- The regulatory impact of community legislation on sport: INT MARKT 26366.
- Lex Olympica: from the inter-state Ancient Greek law to the rules of participation in the Modern Olympic Games.
- True supporters, strict liability, and Feyenoord: the problem of fan-related violence in soccer.
- Italy.
- Rights to broadcast sporting events under Italian law.
- The FIBA Arbitral Tribunal (FAT).
- Extra time: are the new FIFA transfer rules doomed *?
- Guilty until proven innocent: the 'Olympic' element of the advertising regulations for the London 2012 Olympic Games.
- The evolution and effectiveness of football banning orders.
- Ancient Chinese football.
- The FIFA player release rule: critical evaluation and possible legal challenges.
- The regulation of gambling in the United States.
- A study on legal protection of Olympic intellectual property.
- Will the International Olympic Committee pass the torch to women or let it burn out?
- TV rights in Japan.
- U.S. Athletic Associations' rules challenges by International Prospective Student-Athletes--NCAA DI amateurism.
- Regulation of gambling on the Internet.
- Spain.
- You cannot reject the Olympic medal? - Commentary on the CAS Abrahamian case.
- The employment bond in the area of sports.
- TV rights in Turkey.
- Prosecuting sports violence: the Indonesian Football case.