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Harvard JSEL

The Harvard Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law (“JSEL”) provides the academic community, the sports and entertainment industries, and the legal profession with scholarly analysis and research related to the legal aspects of the sports and entertainment world.

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college athletics

The False Dichotomy in Name, Image, and Likeness Legislation

JSEL · August 31, 2020 ·

Steven Bank is the Vice Dean for Curricular and Academic Affairs and Paul Hastings Professor of Business Law at UCLA School of Law. Professor Bank, who received his B.A. from the University of Pennsylvania and his J.D. from the University of Chicago, is a frequent commentator on … [Read more...] about The False Dichotomy in Name, Image, and Likeness Legislation

Filed Under: NIL Special Issue - Fall 2020 Tagged With: college athletics, licensing, merchandise, NCAA, NIL

It is Time to Share Revenue with Collegiate Athletes

JSEL · August 31, 2020 ·

Charles Grantham is Director and Faculty Associate Professor, Center for Sport Management, at Seton Hall University's Stillman School of Business. He has also served as a Visiting Clinical Assistant Professor in New York University's School of Professional Studies, Tisch … [Read more...] about It is Time to Share Revenue with Collegiate Athletes

Filed Under: NIL Special Issue - Fall 2020 Tagged With: college athletics, labor law, licensing, NCAA, NIL

Rethinking Regulation: The Case for a New Agency to Regulate Sport

JSEL · August 31, 2020 ·

Darren Adam Heitner, Esq. is the Founder of Heitner Legal, P.L.L.C., which is a law firm with many practice areas, including sports law and contract law. Heitner has represented numerous athletes and sports agents as legal counsel. Heitner serves as an Adjunct Professor at the … [Read more...] about Rethinking Regulation: The Case for a New Agency to Regulate Sport

Filed Under: NIL Special Issue - Fall 2020 Tagged With: college athletics, NCAA, NIL, Power 5, regulation

Fool Me Once, Shame On You; Fool Me Twice, Shame On Me: Why Congress Must Grant NCAA Athletes Group Licensing And Organization Rights in Name, Image and Likeness Legislation

JSEL · August 31, 2020 ·

Alicia Jessop, Esq. (Alicia.Jessop@pepperdine.edu) is a tenure-track Associate Professor of Sport Law at Pepperdine University. An attorney licensed to practice in California and Colorado, Alicia is the president-elect of the Sport and Recreation Law Association and serves on the … [Read more...] about Fool Me Once, Shame On You; Fool Me Twice, Shame On Me: Why Congress Must Grant NCAA Athletes Group Licensing And Organization Rights in Name, Image and Likeness Legislation

Filed Under: NIL Special Issue - Fall 2020 Tagged With: college athletics, licensing, NCAA, NIL

Navigating the Separation of Powers Labyrinth in Creating an Independent Oversight Body for the NCAA

JSEL · August 31, 2020 ·

Eli Nachmany is a second-year law student at Harvard Law School and the Managing Editor (Print) of the Harvard Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law. Prior to law school, Nachmany worked in the White House Office of American Innovation as a domestic policy aide and as the … [Read more...] about Navigating the Separation of Powers Labyrinth in Creating an Independent Oversight Body for the NCAA

Filed Under: NIL Special Issue - Fall 2020 Tagged With: administrative law, college athletics, independent agencies, NCAA, NIL, separation of powers

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