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Collegiate Licensing
[...]student-athletes would be prohibited from participating in activities that conflict with other NCAA legislation, such as sports wagering or the promotion of banned substances. [...]the Proposal would require certain disclosure obligations: both prospective and current studentathletes would be r...
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Published in: | The Licensing journal 2020-11, Vol.40 (10), p.19-20 |
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container_title | The Licensing journal |
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creator | Conniff, Christopher Gourvitz, Evan Oteh, Chidi Pico, Merissa |
description | [...]student-athletes would be prohibited from participating in activities that conflict with other NCAA legislation, such as sports wagering or the promotion of banned substances. [...]the Proposal would require certain disclosure obligations: both prospective and current studentathletes would be required to disclose any NIL activities, the compensation arrangements involved, and the details of any relevant relationships developed through the process. The day after it announced the Proposal, for example, the NCAA petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Ninth Circuit's decision in Alston v. NCAA, in which the circuit court decided against the NCAA, holding that it may limit grant-in-aid scholarships to the cost of attendance, but may not limit non-cash compensation and benefits that are related to education, such as computers, science equipment, and musical instruments.4,5 Christopher Conniff is a partner in Ropes & Gray's litigation and enforcement practice and head of Ropes & Gray's sports industry group in New York. |
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identifier | ISSN: 1040-4023 |
ispartof | The Licensing journal, 2020-11, Vol.40 (10), p.19-20 |
issn | 1040-4023 |
language | eng |
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source | ABI/INFORM Global; BSC - Ebsco (Business Source Ultimate) |
subjects | Athletes College football College sports Compensation Councils Federal court decisions Intellectual property Legislation Licensing Litigation Musical instruments Scholarships & fellowships Schools Sports Student athletes Students |
title | Collegiate Licensing |
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