Regulating International Sport: Power, Authority and Legitimacy
Autor Lloyd Freeburnen Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 aug 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004379787
ISBN-10: 9004379789
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
ISBN-10: 9004379789
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 The Concern
2 Book Structure
1 Fundamental Aspects of Regulatory Power in International Sport
1 The Structure of International Sports Governance
2 The Nature of Regulatory Power in International Sport
3 The Democratic Legitimacy Deficit in International Sport
4 The Legitimisation of Regulatory Power in International Sport
2 The Contractual Authority of Sports Governing Bodies – The Real and the Fictional
1 Problems in the Contractual Characterisation
2 The Contractual Basis of Regulatory Authority – Conceptual Issues
3 Indirect ‘Contractual’ Devices
4 Implied Contracts in Sport
5 The Vice of the Contractual Characterisation
3 The De Facto Power of Sports Governing Bodies
1 Sport’s Practically and Legally Effective, Pervasive De Facto Power
2 The Foundations of the De Facto Power of Sports Governing Bodies
4 The Extent and Function of Consent in the De Facto Power of Sports Governing Bodies
1 Consent and De Facto Power in Sport
2 De Facto Power and Contracts
3 De Facto Power and Consent
5 The De Facto Jurisdiction of the Court of Arbitration for Sport
1 De Facto Power and Consent to Sports Arbitration
2 The ‘Myth’ of Consent in Sports Arbitration
3 The Inadequate Justification of Non-Consensual Arbitration
4 The Handmaidens of Sport’s International Federations
6 Individual Liberty and De Facto Power
1 Individual Liberty and De Facto Regulatory Power
2 Implications of De Facto Power Not Being the Exercise of Individual Liberty
7 Legitimacy and the Justification of the Regulatory Power of International Sports Governing Bodies
1 The Necessity of Legitimacy
2 Democratic Legitimisation of the Governance Regime of International Sport
3 Democratic Legitimacy and International Sports Arbitration
8 Conferring Legality on the Regulation of International Sport – the Need for an International Treaty
1 The Limited Benefits of Democratic Legitimacy
2 An International Treaty
3 The Contents of a Convention on the Governance of International Sport
4 The Impetus for Reform
5 Conclusion
Bibliography
Table of Cases
Introduction
1 The Concern
2 Book Structure
1 Fundamental Aspects of Regulatory Power in International Sport
1 The Structure of International Sports Governance
2 The Nature of Regulatory Power in International Sport
3 The Democratic Legitimacy Deficit in International Sport
4 The Legitimisation of Regulatory Power in International Sport
2 The Contractual Authority of Sports Governing Bodies – The Real and the Fictional
1 Problems in the Contractual Characterisation
2 The Contractual Basis of Regulatory Authority – Conceptual Issues
3 Indirect ‘Contractual’ Devices
4 Implied Contracts in Sport
5 The Vice of the Contractual Characterisation
3 The De Facto Power of Sports Governing Bodies
1 Sport’s Practically and Legally Effective, Pervasive De Facto Power
2 The Foundations of the De Facto Power of Sports Governing Bodies
4 The Extent and Function of Consent in the De Facto Power of Sports Governing Bodies
1 Consent and De Facto Power in Sport
2 De Facto Power and Contracts
3 De Facto Power and Consent
5 The De Facto Jurisdiction of the Court of Arbitration for Sport
1 De Facto Power and Consent to Sports Arbitration
2 The ‘Myth’ of Consent in Sports Arbitration
3 The Inadequate Justification of Non-Consensual Arbitration
4 The Handmaidens of Sport’s International Federations
6 Individual Liberty and De Facto Power
1 Individual Liberty and De Facto Regulatory Power
2 Implications of De Facto Power Not Being the Exercise of Individual Liberty
7 Legitimacy and the Justification of the Regulatory Power of International Sports Governing Bodies
1 The Necessity of Legitimacy
2 Democratic Legitimisation of the Governance Regime of International Sport
3 Democratic Legitimacy and International Sports Arbitration
8 Conferring Legality on the Regulation of International Sport – the Need for an International Treaty
1 The Limited Benefits of Democratic Legitimacy
2 An International Treaty
3 The Contents of a Convention on the Governance of International Sport
4 The Impetus for Reform
5 Conclusion
Bibliography
Table of Cases
Notă biografică
Lloyd Freeburn, Ph.D. (2018), University of Melbourne, is a Senior Fellow at that university lecturing in event management law. He has published various articles concerning sports law including contributing to the sports law section of Halsbury’s Laws of Australia.