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Entertainment, Arts, and Sports Law Commons

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Series

2013

Discipline
Institution
Keyword
Publication

Articles 31 - 43 of 43

Full-Text Articles in Entertainment, Arts, and Sports Law

Is The Nfl Playing Dirty With Super Bowl Clean Zones?: Will The Noerr-Pennington Doctrine Be Successfully Applied By The Nfl In Williams V. City Of Arlington And Future Cases Involving The Super Bowl Clean Zone Ordinance, Andrew Sachs Jan 2013

Is The Nfl Playing Dirty With Super Bowl Clean Zones?: Will The Noerr-Pennington Doctrine Be Successfully Applied By The Nfl In Williams V. City Of Arlington And Future Cases Involving The Super Bowl Clean Zone Ordinance, Andrew Sachs

Student Works

No abstract provided.


The Economics Of The Infield Fly Rule, Howard M. Wasserman Jan 2013

The Economics Of The Infield Fly Rule, Howard M. Wasserman

Faculty Publications

No sports rule has generated as much legal scholarship as baseball's Infield Fly Rule. Interestingly, however, no one has explained or defended the rule on its own terms as part of the internal rules and institutional structure of baseball as a game. This Article takes on that issue, explaining both why baseball should have the Infield Fly Rule and why a similar rule is not necessary or appropriate in seemingly comparable, but actually quite different, baseball situations., The answer lies in the dramatic cost-benefit disparities present in the infield fly and absent in most other game situations.

The-infield fly is …


"Smut And Nothing But": The Fcc, Indecency, And Regulatory Transformations In The Shadows, Lili Levi Jan 2013

"Smut And Nothing But": The Fcc, Indecency, And Regulatory Transformations In The Shadows, Lili Levi

Articles

No abstract provided.


Beyond Microsoft: Intellectual Property, Peer Production And The Law’S Concern With Market Dominance, Daryl Lim Jan 2013

Beyond Microsoft: Intellectual Property, Peer Production And The Law’S Concern With Market Dominance, Daryl Lim

Faculty Scholarly Works

No abstract provided.


Self-Replicating Technologies And The Challenge For The Patent And Antitrust Laws, Daryl Lim Jan 2013

Self-Replicating Technologies And The Challenge For The Patent And Antitrust Laws, Daryl Lim

Faculty Scholarly Works

Few patented inventions challenge the traditional boundaries of the patent and antitrust laws like those that are capable of multiplying as they are used. These self-replicating technologies are embedded in our food, fortify our vaccines, and form the computer code upon which the information age is based. These inventions create an inherent conflict between patentees and their customers. The conflict arises because every customer could become competitors as the product replicates, potentially making every first sale the patentee's last. They also challenge how we think about fundamental issues of ownership as well as innovation and market competition, and make it …


Pryor Transgressions: An Analysis Of Whether The Nfl’S Personal Conduct Policy Can Be Used To Enforce Ncaa Sanctions, Matt Stankiewicz Jan 2013

Pryor Transgressions: An Analysis Of Whether The Nfl’S Personal Conduct Policy Can Be Used To Enforce Ncaa Sanctions, Matt Stankiewicz

Student Works

No abstract provided.


Discrimination Inward And Upward: Lessons On Law And Social Inequality From The Troubling Case Of Women Coaches, Deborah L. Brake Jan 2013

Discrimination Inward And Upward: Lessons On Law And Social Inequality From The Troubling Case Of Women Coaches, Deborah L. Brake

Articles

In the Title IX success story, women’s opportunities in coaching jobs have not kept pace with the striking gains made by female athletes. Women’s share of jobs coaching female athletes has declined substantially in the years since the law was enacted, moving from more than 90% to below 43% today. As a case study, the situation of women coaches contains important lessons about the ability of discrimination law to promote social equality. This article highlights one feature of bias against women coaches — gender bias by female athletes — as a counter-paradigm that presents a challenge to the dominant frame …


Book Review. Music & Copyright In America: Toward The Celestial Jukebox By Kevin Parks, Michelle M. Botek Jan 2013

Book Review. Music & Copyright In America: Toward The Celestial Jukebox By Kevin Parks, Michelle M. Botek

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Change Of Pace For Grants-In-Aid: Why The Former Ncaa Scholarship Bylaw Violated Antitrust And Student Athletes Should Be Able To Recover, Courtney O'Brien Jan 2013

Change Of Pace For Grants-In-Aid: Why The Former Ncaa Scholarship Bylaw Violated Antitrust And Student Athletes Should Be Able To Recover, Courtney O'Brien

Student Works

No abstract provided.


Sports Leagues And Video Game Licensing: Game Over Or Game On? How Recent Rulings Could Possibly Devalue The Nfl’S Video Game Agreement., Nicholas De Palma Jan 2013

Sports Leagues And Video Game Licensing: Game Over Or Game On? How Recent Rulings Could Possibly Devalue The Nfl’S Video Game Agreement., Nicholas De Palma

Student Works

No abstract provided.


Three Strikes, Yet They Keep On Swinging: Athletes And Domestic Violence, Victoria Lucido Jan 2013

Three Strikes, Yet They Keep On Swinging: Athletes And Domestic Violence, Victoria Lucido

Student Works

No abstract provided.


Proto-Property In Literary And Artistic Works: Sixteenth-Century Papal Printing Privileges, Jane C. Ginsburg Jan 2013

Proto-Property In Literary And Artistic Works: Sixteenth-Century Papal Printing Privileges, Jane C. Ginsburg

Faculty Scholarship

This Study endeavors to reconstruct the Vatican’s precursor system of copyright, and the author’s place in it, inferred from examination of over five hundred privileges and petitions and related documents – almost all unpublished – in the Vatican Secret Archives. The typical account of the precopyright world of printing privileges, particularly in Venice, France and England, portrays a system primarily designed to promote investment in the material and labor of producing and disseminating books; protecting or rewarding authorship was at most an ancillary objective.

The sixteenth-century Papal privileges found in the Archives, however, prompt some rethinking of that story because …


Review Essay, Learning Contracts Through Current Events: Lawrence Cunningham's Contracts In The Real World, Stories Of Popular Contracts And Why They Matter, Miriam A. Cherry Jan 2013

Review Essay, Learning Contracts Through Current Events: Lawrence Cunningham's Contracts In The Real World, Stories Of Popular Contracts And Why They Matter, Miriam A. Cherry

All Faculty Scholarship

This is a review essay of Professor Lawrence Professor Cunningham’s book Contracts in the Real World: Stories of Popular Contracts and Why They Matter (Cambridge 2012). As implied by the title, the book discusses contract law through the lens of well-known cases and celebrities. Along the way, readers will meet intellectuals such as poet Maya Angelou and the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., as well as celebrities known for controversy, like Paris Hilton, Donald Trump, and Charlie Sheen. Professor Cunningham also deftly analyzes some of the notable contract law issues arising from the global financial crisis and the Bernie …