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- 1From:Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience (Vol. 6, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAssemblages of sex are continuously being enacted by policymakers, scientists, and medical providers across a range of settings, resulting in multiple and often contradictory notions of what "sex" is and how it is...
- 2From:Obiter (Vol. 41, Issue 2)1 Introduction The International Association of Athletics Federation (IAAF) regulates the participation of athletes, both male and female, at an international level (see IAAF website https://www.iaaf.org/home)....
- 3From:The International Sports Law Journal (Issue 1-2) Peer-ReviewedIntroductory Remarks Established two years ago in May 2007-with very little fanfare outside the world of basketball-FIBA-the International Basketball Federation-set up its own dispute resolution body, know by the...
- 4From:The International Sports Law Journal (Issue 3-4) Peer-ReviewedFIFA, the governing body of world football has developed a set of rules to regulate situations where players or clubs unilaterally terminate contracts. These rules provide a prominent role for the Court of Arbitration...
- 5From:The International Sports Law Journal (Issue 3-4) Peer-ReviewedIntroductory Remarks Sport is now a global business worth more than 3% of world trade. In the enlarged European Union, now comprising 25 Member States, it accounts for 2% of their combined Gross National Product. It...
- 6From:The International Sports Law Journal (Issue 1-2) Peer-Reviewed1. Introduction Football has for a long time claimed its specificity and exemption from the so called ordinary legislations. It has since time immemorial adopted certain customs; lex sportiva, such as the payment of...
- 7From:SAMJ South African Medical Journal (Vol. 109, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedThe International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) requires the blood testosterone level of female athletes with differences of sex development to be reduced to below 5 nmol/L for a continuous period of at...
- 8From:The International Sports Law Journal (Issue 1-2) Peer-ReviewedIntroduction Arbitration is not a novelty in Romania. Modern judicial institutions began the process of their establishment and development from the 19th century onwards and this process was eased by the political...
- 9From:South African Journal of Sports Medicine (Vol. 32, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn mid-2019, the controversy regarding South African runner Caster Semenya's eligibility to participate in competitions against other female runners culminated in a Court of Arbitration for Sport judgement. Semenya...
- 10From:Art Antiquity & Law (Vol. 24, Issue 3) Peer-Reviewed1. INTRODUCTION There is no autonomous field of law that can properly be characterised as 'art law' because the term and domain are wide and all-encompassing. Therefore there is no such thing as a typical arts dispute....
- 11From:The International Sports Law Journal (Issue 1-2) Peer-ReviewedAfter twenty-one years of operations, the work of the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) based in Lausanne, Switzerland, in providing a forum for the effective settlement of sports-related disputes of various kinds,...
- 12From:Melbourne Journal of International Law (Vol. 12, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe Court of Arbitration for Sport ('CAS') is" a supreme arbitral body, originally established to 'deal with the crises of legitimacy' (1) within international sport. Although the CAS is often heralded as the 'supreme...
- 13From:Issues in Science and Technology (Vol. 36, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn the summer of 1945, Harry Shapiro, the chair and curator of anthropology at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, revealed to the public Norma and Normman, two statues intended to epitomize the average...
- 14From:Kutafin University Law Review (Vol. 6, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis paper examines the relationship of international law to sports law and the particular nature of so called Lex Sportiva (2). The paper also researches whether Lex Sportiva (sometimes also called Lex Olympica) may be...
- 15From:Journal of International Media & Entertainment Law (Vol. 2, Issue 2)Introduction American cyclist Floyd Landis received his day in court--sort of. Landis has been stripped of his Tour de France championship because of doping violations, charges he contended were false. (1) In order...
- 16From:Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies (Vol. 22, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAbstract To participate in international competitions, countries must submit to the doping rules set forth in the World Anti-Doping Code (the Code), a document brought into being by the World Anti-Doping Agency...
- 17From:The International Sports Law Journal (Issue 3-4) Peer-ReviewedIntroduction Almost ten years after the first Ad hoc division (AHD) of the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) was set up for the Games of the XXVI Olympiad in Atlanta (1996), the CAS organised another AHD for the...
- 18From:Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law (Vol. 47, Issue 1)ABSTRACT The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) and the World Anti-Doping Code are largely considered the model for an effective and well-coordinated antidoping regime. This model has allowed numerous sports and various...
- 19From:The International Sports Law Journal (Issue 3-4) Peer-ReviewedThe Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), based in Lausanne, Switzerland, has just published (July, 2009) a Digest of the Awards made by its Ad Hoc Division (AHD) - a kind of circuit tribunal of the CAS - during the...
- 20From:Proceedings: International Symposium for Olympic ResearchIn 1992, the International Olympic Committee contravened the UN Security Council by whisking individuals out of besieged Sarajevo, creating a kind of diplomatic immunity out of thin air in order to side-step Spanish...