The Oxford Handbook of American Sports Law takes the reader through the most important controversies and critical developments in law and U.S. sports. Over the course of 30 chapters, leading scholars explore this expanding and captivating area of law. The Handbook is the first book to gather dozens of perspectives on sports law controversies in the United States, and will be of interest to those who study and practice sports law, as well as
journalists, broadcasters, and legally minded sports fans.The Oxford Handbook of American Sports Law incorporates analysis of key historical events in sports law-such as the rise of free agency in
professional sports and the concept of "amateurism" for college athletes-and their broader context. Contemporary legal controversies in U.S. sports and their accompanying questions are also of central importance: In a sensible legal system, how would long-term neurological injuries from contact sports be addressed? How would the use of racially insensitive team names be resolved? How would a seemingly trivial dispute over air pressure in footballs be studied from the competing perspectives of
players, teams, and leagues? The Oxford Handbook of American Sports Law weighs not just the facts, but how courts and lawmakers ought to consider the most important questions at
stake.The essays in this volume also canvass the types of legal controversies in sports likely to surface in the future. This is particularly true of law and technology matters, including those related to broadcasting and streaming. Legal doctrine has been and will continue to be forced to adapt to these developments, and the Handbook both forecasts coming debates and outlines where the law may be headed.
The Oxford Handbook of American Sports Law takes the reader through the most important controversies and critical developments in law and U.S. sports. Over the course of 30 chapters, leading scholars explore this expanding and captivating area of law. The Handbook is the first book to gather dozens of perspectives on sports law controversies in the United States, and will be of interest to those who study and practice sports law, as well as
journalists, broadcasters, and legally minded sports fans.The Oxford Handbook of American Sports Law incorporates analysis of key historical events in sports law-such as the rise of free agency in
professional sports and the concept of "amateurism" for college athletes-and their broader context. Contemporary legal controversies in U.S. sports and their accompanying questions are also of central importance: In a sensible legal system, how would long-term neurological injuries from contact sports be addressed? How would the use of racially insensitive team names be resolved? How would a seemingly trivial dispute over air pressure in footballs be studied from the competing perspectives of
players, teams, and leagues? The Oxford Handbook of American Sports Law weighs not just the facts, but how courts and lawmakers ought to consider the most important questions at
stake.The essays in this volume also canvass the types of legal controversies in sports likely to surface in the future. This is particularly true of law and technology matters, including those related to broadcasting and streaming. Legal doctrine has been and will continue to be forced to adapt to these developments, and the Handbook both forecasts coming debates and outlines where the law may be headed.
1. Introduction: American Sports Law through Deflategate by Michael
A. McCann
2. The Evolution of the Power of the Commissioner in Professional
Sports by Jimmy Golen & Warren K. Zola
3. Leagues and Owners: The Donald Sterling Story by Michael A.
McCann
4. The Commissioner's Power to Discipline Players for On- and
Off-Field Misconduct by Richard T. Karcher
5. The Regulation of Doping in U.S. and International Sports by
Maureen A. Weston
6. Drugs in Professional Sports by Todd Clark
7. Blood Sports in an Age of Liability by Jeffrey Standen
8. Sports and American Tort Law by Geoffrey Rapp
9. The Increasing Role of Disability Issues in U.S. Sports Law by
Dionne Koller
10. Collective Bargaining and Workforce Protections in Sports by
Nicholas M. Ohanesian
11. Collective Bargaining in Professional Sports: The Duel Between
Players and Owners and Labor Law and Antitrust Law by Gabe
Feldman
12. The Single-Entity Doctrine of Antitrust as Applied to Sports
Leagues by Stephen F. Ross
13. Eligibility Rules in Professional Sports by Glenn M. Wong and
Christopher R. Deubert
14. Athlete Representation by Ed Edmonds
15. Identity and Speech in Sport in the Social Media Era by Jimmy
Sanderson
16. The "Shifting Line" of Sports Betting Legalization by Daniel L.
Wallach
17. The Enduring Power of the Sports Broadcasting Act by Nathaniel
Grow
18. Youth and High School Sports Law Issues by Brian L. Porto
19. College Athletics: The Growing Tension Between Amateurism &
Commercialism by Warren K. Zola
20. Title IX and U.S. College Sports: Contemporary Challenges to
Compliance by Erin E. Buzuvis
21. Recreational Sports Law by Thomas A. Baker III
22. Arbitration and the Olympic Athlete by Sean Nolon
23. Competition Law, Free Movement of Players, and Nationality
Restrictions by Ryan Gauthier
24. Athlete Trademarks: Names, Nicknames, & Catchphrases by
Alexandra J. Roberts
25. Trade Secrets and Information Security in the Age of Sports
Analytics by Roger Allan Ford
26. The Role of Bioethics in Sports Law by Alan Milstein
27. The Rooney Rule's Reach: How the NFL's Equal Opportunity
Initiative for Coaches Inspired Local Government Reform by N.
Jeremi Duru
28. Sports in the Context of Social Media Law by Jon M. Garon
29. Public Development for Professional Sports Stadiums by Irwin P.
Raij and Alexander Chester
30. Daily Fantasy Sports and PASPA: How to Assess Whether the State
Regulation of Daily Fantasy Sports Contests Violates Federal Law by
Daniel L. Wallach
Michael A. McCann is the Associate Dean for Academic Affairs at the
University of New Hampshire School of Law, where he is also
Director of the Sports and Entertainment Law Institute and a
Professor of Law. He has published articles in the Yale Law
Journal, Boston College Law Review, and Harvard Journal of Sports
and Entertainment Law, among other leading law reviews. He is also
an investigative writer and Legal Analyst for Sports Illustrated.
He
has written over 600 articles for Sports Illustrated since joining
the publication in 2007 and was the first journalist to interview
Lance Armstrong after his 2013 interview with Oprah Winfrey. He is
also a sports
attorney and served as a member of the legal team that represented
Ohio State University running back Maurice Clarett in his historic
case against the NFL and its eligibility rule. McCann is also
collaborating with Ed O'Bannon on a book detailing O'Bannon's
path-breaking case against the NCAA.
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