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Recently published scholarship

February 3rd, 2012 No comments

In Press, Spring-Summer 2012:

  • Kaburakis, A. (2012). The Evolution of Intellectual Property Theory and the Right of Publicity in the U.S. Contemporary application in the entertainment and sport industry. In Balcarczyk, J. (ed.) Rights of personality in the XXI century. New values, new rules, new technologies. Wolters Kluwer International (in press)
  • Kaburakis, A. & Clavio, G. (2012). Legal and Ethical Dimensions of Sport Public Relations. In Stoldt, C., Dittmore, S., and Branvold, S. (eds.) Sport Public Relations. 2nd ed. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, ISBN: 978-07-3609-038-4, 299-316

Published, Fall 2011:

Categories: Research updates Tags:

Blog contributions

December 27th, 2011 No comments
Categories: Blog contributions Tags:

Sports Law Analytics

May 27th, 2011 No comments

1) Current research projects cited in recent Chronicle of Higher Education and ESPN articles. Also recent entry in the Sports Law Blog.

2) Good friend and colleague Dr. Ryan Rodenberg, fellow traveler in professional service and academic contributions, as well as several empirical legal scholarship journeys, and I co-authored “Sports Law Analytics“, published in the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS) Analytics online journal, May-June 2011. A podcast on it is available as well.

Categories: Miscellanea, Research updates Tags:

New Sports Business program at SLU – John Cook School of Business

April 23rd, 2011 No comments

Took a lot of hard work, but definitely worth every second… We proudly announce the commencement of operations for the Saint Louis University (SLU) John Cook School of Business (JCSB) Sports Business program.

Honoring us with their presence and contributions during our kickoff event were several top executives from the sport industry, and we are blessed to have many good friends and supporters joining our Advisory Board team for future directions of the program and our students’ tremendous benefit. Importantly, the work conducted around the days of the symposium in Alliance for Sport Business workshops, in regard to directions of the field and programs in Schools of Business, was simply outstanding and truly promising for the future.

Wholehearted thanks to all who participated and celebrated with us!

Categories: Miscellanea Tags:

Amateurism proposals 2010 – Likeness

April 23rd, 2011 No comments

UPDATE IV: Chronicle of Higher Education plug here. We are keeping at it.

UPDATE III: No go. LGC defeats three, tables one. Very prudently so, with the pending litigation analyzed earlier and in our ensuing pieces. LGC met earlier this week, Apr 11 and 12, on important agenda items. Check back here for full April LGC meeting report. And stay tuned, quite a bit coming up on this amateurism policy front in the near future.

UPDATE II: After the January Convention and the Legislative Council (LGC) sending Proposal 2010-26 for further membership review and commentary, the Amateurism Cabinet provided recently (Feb 2011) some options for adoption of the proposal for the membership (and eventually the LGC) to consider. As usual the LGC will have the key decision in its mid-April meeting in which it can adopt, defeat, or amend legislation, forwarding to the Board of Directors (end of April meeting), which will be charged with the decision triggering the final 60-days’ override period carrying the proposal to its final status as adopted, amended (and adopted), or defeated at the end of June.

As our research group is completing two empirical pieces on related policy matters, and the issues herein (per prior scholarship) are pending before the 9th Cir. in cases which our research group forecasted, we will refrain from further commentary at this time.

A week before the NCAA Convention in San Antonio, always useful to refresh our review of certain key amateurism policy proposals. As per recent research and implications for practitioners, arguably the  most interesting and controversial (considering related proposals were tabled a few years ago; UPDATE confirming controversial character and significance of proposal on NCAA News here) is 2010-26, coming after the wave of litigation and policy entanglements over student-athletes’ likenesses and in particular their use in college sports video games. For the time being, find the proposal as it stands below, and more analysis and updates to follow subsequent to NCAA Convention sessions. Proposal 2010-26:
(Update, March 13, incl. new amendments’ links)

2010-26-1 AMATEURISM — PROMOTIONAL ACTIVITIES — USE OF A STUDENT-ATHLETE’S NAME OR LIKENESS — PRIMARY PURPOSE OF COMMERCIAL ADVERTISEMENT
2010-26-2 AMATEURISM — PROMOTIONAL ACTIVITIES — USE OF A STUDENT-ATHLETE’S NAME OR LIKENESS — NO COMMERCIAL ADVERTISEMENTS OTHER THAN CONGRATULATORY
2010-26-3 AMATEURISM — PROMOTIONAL ACTIVITIES — USE OF A STUDENT-ATHLETE’S NAME OR LIKENESS — CO-SPONSORS OF PROMOTIONAL ACTIVITIES — CONSOLIDATION OF MEDIA ACTIVITIES

60-Day Comment Period         Process Diagram

To revise the regulations related to use of a student-athlete’s name or likeness for promotions, advertisements and media activities, as specified.

Amend 12.02, as follows:

12.02 DEFINITIONS AND APPLICATIONS

[12.02.1 unchanged.]

12.02.2 Likeness.  Likeness includes an individual’s image, photograph, likeness (whether actual, simulated, photographic, computer-generated, rendered, caricature or otherwise), voice (whether speaking, rapping, singing, altered or otherwise), personality, biographical information and/or other personal identification.

12.02.3 Name.  Name includes an individual’s name, nickname, sobriquet, signature (whether actual, simulated, photographic, computer-generated, rendered, caricature or otherwise) and/or other personal identification.

[12.02.2 through 12.02.5 renumbered as 12.02.4 through 12.02.7, unchanged.]

Amend 12.5.1, as follows:

12.5.1 Permissible.

12.5.1.1 Institutional, Charitable, Education or Nonprofit Promotions.  A member institution or recognized entity thereof (e.g., fraternity, sorority or student government organization), a member conference or noninstitutional charitable, educational or nonprofit agency may use a student-athlete’s name, picture likeness or appearance to support its charitable or educational activities or to support activities considered incidental to the student-athlete’s participation in intercollegiate athletics, provided the following conditions are met:

(a) The student-athlete receives written approval to participate from the promotional activity must be approved in writing by the institution’s director of athletics (or his or her designee who may not be a coaching staff member), subject to the limitations on participants in such activities as set forth in Bylaw 17;

(b) The student-athlete and an authorized representative of the charitable, educational or nonprofit agency must sign a release statement granting permission to use his or her name, likeness or appearance in a manner consistent with the requirements of this section;

(bc) The specific promotional activity or project in which the student-athlete participates does not may involve co-sponsorship, advertisement or promotion by a commercial agency entity, as approved by the institution, subject to the following conditions: other than through the reproduction of the sponsoring company’s officially registered regular trademark or logo on printed materials such as pictures, posters or calendars.  The company’s emblem, name, address and telephone number may be included with the trademark or logo.  Personal names, messages and slogans (other than an officially registered trademark) are prohibited;

(1) The promotion must identify (e.g., via graphics, voice over, text) the commercial entity’s affiliation with the institution, conference or noninstitutional charitable, educational or nonprofit agency (e.g., entity is the official sponsor of the institution or event); and

(2) There is no indication in the makeup, wording or action of the co-sponsorship that the student-athlete endorses or is directly promoting the use of a product or service of the commercial entity.

(c) The name or picture of a student-athlete with remaining eligibility may not appear on an institution’s printed promotional item (e.g., poster, calendar) that includes a reproduction of a product with which a commercial entity is associated if the commercial entity’s officially registered trademark or logo also appears on the item;

(d) The student-athlete does shall not miss class;

(e) All money’s derived from the activity or project go directly to the member institution, member conference or the charitable, educational or nonprofit agency;

(fe) The student-athlete may accept actual and necessary expenses from the member institution, member conference or the charitable, educational or nonprofit agency related to participation in such activity; and

(g) The student-athlete’s name, picture or appearance is not used to promote the commercial ventures of any nonprofit agency;

(hf) Any institutional commercial items with names, or likenesses or pictures of multiple student-athletes (other than highlight films or media guides per Bylaw 12.5.1.7) may be sold only at by the member institution at which the student-athlete is enrolled, the institution’s conference, institutionally controlled (owned and operated) outlets or other institutionally authorized entities (subject to Bylaw 12.5.1.1.1) or outlets controlled by the charitable, educational or nonprofit organization (e.g., location of the charitable or educational organization, site charitable event during the event).  Items that include an individual student-athlete’s name, picture or likeness (e.g., name on jersey, name or likeness on a bobble-head doll), other than informational items (e.g., media guide, schedule cards, institutional publications), may not be sold; and

(i) The student-athlete and an authorized representative of the charitable, educational or nonprofit agency sign a release statement ensuring that the student-athlete’s name, image or appearance is used in a manner consistent with the requirements of this section.

12.5.1.1.1 Sale of Institutional Commercial Items. A commercial entity may sell an institutional commercial item that includes the names and/or likenesses of multiple student-athletes, provided the following conditions are met:

(a) The sale of the commercial item is approved by the institution’s director of athletics (or his or her designee who may not be a coaching staff member);

(b) The commercial item must be considered to be an institutional item and must include the name of the institution.  Two or more institutions may collectively agree to authorize or license a commercial item that includes the names or likenesses of multiple student-athletes [any commercial item authorized for sale by the institution (or institutions) may be considered to be an institutional commercial item];

(c) The involved student-athletes have signed a release statement granting permission to use their names or likenesses in a manner consistent with the requirements of this section;

(d) The involved student-athletes shall not directly endorse or promote the use of the commercial item; and

(e) The commercial item does not involve or relate in any way to alcoholic beverages, tobacco products or an organization that is involved with or promotes gambling.

12.5.1.1.12 Promotions Involving NCAA Championships, Events, Activities or Programs.  The NCAA [or third part acting on behalf of the NCAA (e.g., host institution, conference, local organizing committee)] may use the name or picture likeness of an enrolled student-athlete to generally promote NCAA championships or other NCAA events, activities or programs.

12.5.1.1.23 Promotions Involving Commercial Locations/Sponsors.  A member institution, a member conference or a charitable, educational or nonprofit organization may use the appearance, name or picture likeness of an enrolled student-athlete to promote generally its fundraising activities at the location of a commercial establishment, provided the commercial establishment is not which may be a co-sponsor of the event activity, provided and the student-athlete does not directly promote the sale of a commercial product or service in conjunction with the fundraising activity. A commercial establishment would become a co-sponsor if the commercial establishment either advertises the presence of the student-athlete at the commercial location or is involved directly or indirectly in promoting the activity.

[12.5.1.1.3 through 12.5.1.1.4 renumbered as 12.5.1.1.4 through 12.5.1.1.5, unchanged.]

12.5.1.1.5 Schedule Cards.  An advertisement on an institution’s wallet-size playing schedule that includes the name or picture of a student-athlete may include language other than the commercial product’s name, trademark or logo, provided the commercial language does not appear on the same page as the picture of the student-athlete.  A violation of this bylaw shall be considered an institutional violation per Constitution 2.8.1; however, such a violation shall not affect the student-athlete’s eligibility.

[12.5.1.1.6 unchanged.]

[12.5.1.2 through 12.5.1.3 unchanged.]

12.5.1.4 Congratulatory Advertisement or PromotionIt is permissible for a student-athlete’s name or picture, or the group picture of an institution’s athletics squad, to appear in an advertisement of a particular business, commercial product or service, provided:

(a) The primary purpose of the advertisement is to publicize the sponsor’s congratulations to the student-athlete or team;

(b) The advertisement does not include a reproduction of the product with which the business is associated or any other item or description identifying the business or service other than its name or trademark;

(c) There is no indication in the makeup or wording of the advertisement that the squad members, individually or collectively, or the institution endorses the product or service of the advertiser;

(d) The student-athlete has not signed a consent or release granting permission to use the student-athlete’s name or picture in a manner inconsistent with the requirements of this section; and

(e) If the student-athlete has received a prize from a commercial sponsor in conjunction with participation in a promotional contest and the advertisement involves the announcement of receipt of the prize, the receipt of the prize is consistent with the provisions of Bylaw 12.5.2.3.3 and official interpretations.

An advertisement or promotion by a commercial entity may include a student-athlete’s name or likeness (e.g., competition video footage, competition photographs), provided the following conditions are met:

(a) The advertisement or promotion is approved by the institution’s director of athletics (or his or her designee who may not be a coaching staff member);

(b) The student-athlete has signed a release statement granting permission to use his or her name or likeness in a manner consistent with the requirements of this section;

(c) The student-athlete does not miss class;

(d) The advertisement or promotion identifies (e.g., via graphics, voice over, text) the commercial entity’s affiliation with the institution, conference or the NCAA (e.g., entity is the official sponsor of the institution or event);

(e) There is no indication in the makeup, wording or action of the advertisement or promotion that the student-athlete endorses or is directly promoting the use of a product or service of the commercial entity;

(f) If a student-athlete’s name is used in the advertisement or promotion, a reference to the student-athlete’s institution must be used immediately before or after his or her name; and

(g) The advertisement or promotion does not involve alcoholic beverages, tobacco products or an organization that is involved with or promotes gambling.

12.5.1.4.1 Effect of Violation.  A violation of this bylaw shall be considered an institutional violation per Constitution 2.8.1; however, the student-athlete’s eligibility shall not be affected.

[12.5.1.5 through 12.5.1.6 unchanged.]

12.5.1.7 Promotion by Third Party of Highlight Film, Video or Media Guide.  Any party other than the institution or a student-athlete (e.g., a distribution company) may sell and distribute an institutional highlight film or video or an institutional or conference media guide that contains the names and pictures of enrolled student-athletes only if:

(a) The institution specifically designates any agency that is authorized to receive orders for the film, video or media guide;

(b) Sales and distribution activities have the written approval of the institution’s athletics director;

(c) The distribution company or a retail store is precluded from using the name or picture of an enrolled student-athlete in any poster or other advertisement to promote the sale or distribution of the film or media guide; and

(d) There is no indication in the makeup or wording of the advertisement that the squad members, individually or collectively, or the institution endorses the product or services of the advertiser.

[12.5.1.8 through 12.5.1.9 renumbered as 12.5.1.7 through 12.5.1.8, unchanged.]

Amend 12.5.2, as follows:

12.5.2 Nonpermissible.

12.5.2.1 Advertisement and Promotions Subsequent to Enrollment.  After becoming a student-athlete, an individual shall not be eligible for participation in intercollegiate athletics if the individual:

(a) Accepts any remuneration for or permits the use of his or her name or picture likeness to advertise, recommend or promote directly the sale or use of a commercial product or service of any kind, except as permitted in Bylaws 12.5.1.1 and 12.5.1.4, or

[Remainder of 12.5.2.1 unchanged.]

12.5.2.2 Use of a Student-Athlete’s Name or Picture Likeness without Knowledge or Permission.  If a student-athlete’s name or picture likeness appears on commercial items (e.g., T-shirts, sweatshirts, serving trays, playing cards, posters) or is used to advertise or promote a commercial product or service sold by an individual or agency without the student-athlete’s knowledge or permission in a manner contrary to the requirements of Bylaw 12.5.1.4, the student-athlete (or the institution acting on behalf of the student-athlete) is required to take steps to stop such an activity in order to retain his or her eligibility for intercollegiate athletics.  Such steps are not required in cases in which a student-athlete’s photograph is sold by an individual or agency (e.g., private photographer, news agency) for private use.

12.5.2.3 Specifically Restricted Activities.  A student-athlete’s involvement in promotional activities specified in this section is prohibited.

12.5.2.3.1 Name the Player Contest.  A student-athlete may not permit use of his or her name or picture in a “name the player” contest conducted by a commercial business for the purpose of promoting that business.

12.5.2.3.2 Athletics Equipment Advertisement.  A student-athlete’s name or picture may not be used by an athletics equipment company or manufacturer to publicize the fact that the institution’s team uses its equipment.

[12.5.2.4 renumbered as 12.5.2.3, unchanged.]

Amend 12.5.3, as follows:

12.5.3 Media Activities.

(a) During the Playing Season. During the playing season, a student-athlete may appear on radio and television programs (e.g., coaches’ shows) or engage in writing projects when the student-athlete’s appearance or participation is related in any way to athletics ability or prestige, provided the student-athlete does not receive any remuneration for the appearance or participation in the activity. The student-athlete shall not make any endorsement, expressed or implied, of any commercial product or service. The student-athlete may, however, receive actual and necessary expenses directly related to the appearance or participation in the activity. A student-athlete participating in media activities during the playing season may not miss class, except for class time missed in conjunction with away-from-home competition or to participate in a conference-sponsored media day.

(b) Outside the Playing Season. Outside the playing season, a A student-athlete may participate in media activities (e.g., appearance on radio, television, in films or stage productions or participation in writing projects) when such appearance or participation is related in any way to athletics ability or prestige, provided the student-athlete is eligible academically to represent the institution, and he or she does not receive any remuneration for such appearance or participation and he or she is not portrayed in a manner as promoting or directly endorsing the sale or use of a commercial product or service. The student-athlete may not make any endorsement, expressed or implied, of any commercial product or service. The student-athlete may, however, receive legitimate and normal expenses directly related to such appearance or participation, provided the source of the expenses is the entity sponsoring the activity.  A student-athlete participating in media activities may not miss class, except for class time missed in conjunction with away-from-home competition or to participate in a conference-sponsored media day.

12.5.3.1 Use of a Student-Athlete’s Name of Likeness by a Media Entity in Conjunction with Coverage of Intercollegiate Competition and Other Activities.  A media entity, or its authorized distributor, may include a student-athlete’s name or likeness in its coverage and promotion of intercollegiate competition and other activities incidental to his or her participation in intercollegiate athletics, provided the student-athlete is not portrayed in a manner as promoting or directly endorsing the sale or use of a commercial product or service.  A media entity may feature a student-athlete’s name or likeness in the course of its journalistic coverage of news (and the promotions of such coverage) related to the student-athlete or his or her institution or conference or the NCAA.

NCAA Division I Amateurism Cabinet

August 1, 2011

Amendment

Amateurism

This proposal is a result of the work of the NCAA Task Force on Commercial Activity in Division I Intercollegiate Athletics. This legislation will help to achieve the balance in intercollegiate athletics that is needed with regard to commercial activities and the use of student-athlete’s names or likeness. This proposal was developed in the spirit of balancing the importance of commercial sponsors in maintaining a comprehensive athletics program and the importance of protecting student-athletes from being exploited by commercial entities. This proposal provides an institution, conference or the NCAA flexibility in developing relationships with commercial entities that benefit athletics programs, while maintaining the principle prohibiting commercial exploitation of student-athletes. The Amateurism Cabinet will continue to evaluate and monitor issues related to commercialism and the use of student-athletes’ names and likenesses and will continue to make policy or legislative recommendations related to such uses. The NCAA Academic and Membership Affairs staff and the Legislative Review and Interpretations Committee will continue to provide interpretations related to student-athlete amateurism. The governance structure ultimately serves as a check on the consistency of such interpretations.

None.

None.


Feb 25, 2010: Submit; Submitted for consideration.
Jun 25, 2010: Amateurism Cabinet, Sponsored
Sep 30, 2010: Amateurism Cabinet, Modified the Proposal; Proposal modified to clarify that an institution, individually, or two or more institutions, collectively, may agree to authorize or license a commercial item that includes the names or likenesses of multiple student-athletes, subject to the requirements of Bylaws 12.5.1.1 and 12.5.1.1.1.
Jan 13, 2011: Leg Council Init Review, Forwarded for Membership Comment
Jan 16, 2011: Comment Period; Start of Comment Period
Mar 16, 2011: Comment Period; End of Comment Period; (Official Comment Totals: Support = 0, Oppose = 1, Abstain = 0)

 

References
Legislative References
Div. Number Title
I 12.5.2.1 Advertisements and Promotions After Becoming a Student-Athlete.
I 12.5.3 Media Activities.
I 12.5 PROMOTIONAL ACTIVITIES
I 12.5.1 Permissible.
I 12.5.2 Nonpermissible.
I 12.02 DEFINITIONS AND APPLICATIONS
I 12.5.1.1 Institutional, Charitable, Education or Nonprofit Promotions.
Other
Proposals: 3
Categories: NCAA Tags:

Kanter

January 10th, 2011 No comments

Update: Kanter wrap-up here.

More subsequent to the NCAA Convention this week.

Categories: NCAA Tags:

Honored…

December 29th, 2010 No comments

… honored, humbled, and tremendously excited for good work ahead on all fronts:

Sport Business International
2010 Top 20 Most Influential Sports Lawyers

SportBusiness staff, readers, and Andy Brown (Editor, World Sports Law Report) nominate the most influential lawyers in the sports industry over the past year and explain why they made the list. The Sport Business International Journal is widely acknowledged as the most comprehensive publication for the international sport industry.

Several updates on various projects and significant developments for our SLU Program, the Alliance for Sport Business, our collaborative research groups, and a host of promising opportunities we have been blessed with, to ensue over the course of the next couple of months… It will surely be a plenty busy and entertaining spring… We will all keep enjoying the learning process and contribution efforts.

Also overdue, some NCAA amateurism policy and international student-athletes updates, during an extremely hectic fall and academic year. Roundup of amateurism-related proposals, commercial actors and promotional activity, agents and professional sports counseling panels, as well as the usual tidbits of insight from key stakeholders, should follow upon return from the NCAA Convention in San Antonio, over the second week of Jan. Further, the Scholarly Colloquium will allow for important discussions and yield potential directions for gender and inclusion policy, with our panel focusing on transgender and intersex athletes’ matters, following the ISLBC keynote forum.
Stay tuned and if around during the days of the Convention in San Antonio, please feel free to contact so we may visit and brainstorm on issues of interest.

Categories: Miscellanea, Research updates Tags:

International Sport Law & Business Conference – Istanbul, Turkey, Sept. 6-7, 2010

March 21st, 2010 No comments

Update: New Call for Abstracts available as of Mon, April 4, 2010. See below and the ISLBC website. Also, peruse our colleagues’ May Istanbul international sports law symposium here.

Dr. Kaburakis is cooperating with several academic and industry constituents, organizing the International Sport Law and Business Conference, to take place in Istanbul, Turkey, September 6-7, 2010. This promises to be an excellent gathering of intellectual capital, with tremendous potential for meaningful contributions to the field through the establishment of partnerships, quality publications, and mutually beneficial initiatives pursued by sport professionals. At times of extremes, intense hardship felt by this and most other industries, as well as the concurrent opportunities that trying times carry, there is no better venue to reach balanced analysis and carefully weighed recommendations than Istanbul, embodying the “bridge between worlds” since its founding. Do consider joining the outstanding group of colleagues that have been contributing research, reviews, and support in September. As you will realize by the Call below and after perusing the conference website, this is definitely a worthwhile venture, with a great deal to offer.

Keep checking the ISLBC website for updates and consider making travel plans well in advance. These will be busy, productive, and thoroughly enjoyable times in Istanbul. As evident from recent past, when Greek and Turkish colleagues put their heads together… miracles tend to happen!

Read more…

Categories: Miscellanea Tags:

Proposal 2009-22 in 2010

March 13th, 2010 No comments

UPDATE: Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Impressive, and congrats to all involved! The delayed enrollment portion of 09-22 indeed suspended for 2010-2011. Solid work from many constituents in order to maintain the crucial balance embedded in 09-22. Outstanding and inspired work from Amateurism Cabinet and Legislative Council (LGC) members. Also major kudos and congrats to the several coaches associations, compliance professionals, and many stakeholders who presented solid arguments and precedent/research-based data that would build a strong case for the LGC to agree on amending 09-22 and suspending the delayed enrollment portion. And a note of recognition to a group that rarely receives praise, but most frequently is chastised and criticized in popular media: the national office staff… Their efforts should be appreciated by all involved parties, in streamlining the legislative process, engaging in constant educational and communication outreach efforts, learning and teaching key constituents (and each other) in the membership’s usually mercurial course of policy-making. There are good, balanced, hard-working, highly motivated people in Indy right now, trying to maintain the extremely delicate balance between the Association’s principles and contemporary reality, which often just does not allow for maintaining the traditional principles this miracle of higher education and sport entailed from its creation through the 20th Century.
As always, a word of caution to keep the balance: this means that recruiting will be fierce this year (especially during what is left in the spring and summer recruiting periods with 2010 prospects who might have been untouchable until now but will be pursued even for this Aug enrollment) and going into the 2010-2011 season (with coaches further aspiring at recruiting-friendly amendments during the 10-11 legislative cycle). Hopefully coaches will remain constrained by their values and upholding the Association’s fundamental principles. If they do select to go the route of cut-throat intercollegiate athletics recruiting and competition in a take-no-prisoners industry, they may get their wishes fulfilled… On one hand, what most everyone agreed on, they will be able to recruit (pre-HS graduation) kids that will be immediately eligible even though they did play professionally, as long as the 12.02.4 provisions and expenses’ aspects analyzed below are in place. On the other hand, most remarkably, it will not even matter if currently recruited or now recruitable prospects graduated HS as early as the summer of 2006 (!) when they were 16, i.e. in the case of UK soccer SAs, and played pro/semi-pro for the past 4-5 seasons, but without going above and beyond actual and necessary expenses and abiding by 12.02.4 (worth here to put another plug-in to our mystery colleague at the Bylaw Blog for simply outstanding work, truly brilliant and insightful posts, for a creation that the world of Compliance and the industry needed for some time… keep the mystery and solid contributions going).
Shrewd coaches will start today, if not already, to look at such prospects, research their particular academic and amateurism conditions, encourage them to immediately register with the Eligibility Center, and we could be looking at an amazingly competitive recruiting and playing season in 2010-2011, and possibly beyond… This year’s gate might involve hard to control floods in ensuing years, even after a modified proposal on delayed enrollment and organized competition attempting to keep the balance between deregulation and upholding amateurism/institutional control/SA welfare/competitive equity principles in the 2010-2011 cycle.
So go crazy in what is left with this year’s recruiting period, find your athletically seasoned and hopefully academically prepared difference-makers, continue to provide the exquisite opportunities for young athletes to experience the true blessing that is higher education in the US, enjoy the process of building bridges between the worlds, have fun… and please recruit responsibly!

For a retrospect on Proposal 2009-22, refer to earlier entries here.

After considerable deliberation, membership feedback, and Amateurism Cabinet recommendations, the Legislative Council (April 12-13, Indy meetings) Read more…

Categories: NCAA Tags:

In Progress

February 28th, 2010 No comments

Presentations

  • Kaburakis, A., Potuto, J., Katz, R., and Hilbert, R. (2010). Amateurism Compliance, 21st Century Law, Intellectual Property and Student-Athletes’ Rights of Publicity, institutional promotions, marketing, and commercial activity.
    2010 National Association for Athletics Compliance Annual Conference as part of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics Annual Convention,
    Anaheim, California – June 21-22, 2010
    Continuing Legal Education (CLE) credits session
  • Yakovee, V. & Kaburakis, A. (2010). International Risk Management Considerations for the Global Sports Lawyer.
    36th Annual Sports Lawyers Association Conference
    , Phoenix, Arizona – May 20-22, 2010
    CLE credits session
  • Kaburakis, A., Miller, K, Dahlberg, E, and Patel, S. (2010). Science, Law, Policy and Inclusion leading to the London Olympics. Changing Perspective: Gender in Sport Competition.
    Ithaca
    College Conference on Law, Policy and the Olympic Movement, London, England – May 13-15, 2010
  • Sharp, L. & Kaburakis, A. (2010). The National Letter of Intent: A Contract Analysis.
    2010 College Sport Research Institute Scholarly Conference,
    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill – April 21-23, 2010
  • Kaburakis, A., Kposowa, A., Paule, A., and Glyniadaki, A. Race, ethnicity, and the globalization of sports: stories of college athletes.
    (under review)
  • Kaburakis, A. Sport talent, labor migration, and the adventures of youth. A comparative analysis of the Junichi Tazawa and Brandon Jennings cases.
    (under review)
  • Kaburakis, A., Grady, J., Clavio, G., and Pierce, D. Delineating the Boundaries of Marketing Innovation Versus 21st Century Intellectual Property Theory in the Entertainment & Sports Industry.
    (under review)

Journal Articles

  • Kaburakis, A., Sharp, L., and Pierce, D. Integrating fields in Sport Law: Using the O’Brien v Ohio State University case to teach principles of Contract Law, NCAA Compliance, and International Arbitration.
    (under review)
  • Pierce, D., Lawrence, H., and Kaburakis, A. Creating Synergy between Athletics Compliance and Academic Programs. Student Workers in the Compliance Office.
    (under review)
Categories: Research updates Tags: