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- Amateur; amateurism; sports; football; college football; athelete; college athelete; student athelete; NCAA; Mark Emmert; right to publicity; First Amendment; Olympics; Olympic Model; Olympic amateur; labor law; employment law; name and likeness; Pay to Play Act; college; university; antitrust law; Ninth Circuit; FanDuel; fantasy sports; minor league; Fair Labor Standards Act; FLSA; law; policy (1)
- Contract law (1)
- Contract law; impossibility doctrine; law and economics (1)
- Cyber-attacks; cyber-crime; information security; cybersecurity; Ponemon Institute; data sharing; data breach; Securities Exchange Commission; SEC; hacking; information technology system; phishing; Department of Justice; DOJ; cybercriminal; malware; spyware; IT; Denial of Service Attacks; DoS; DDoS; Distributed Denial of Service campaign; third-party vendor attack; Dumpster Diving; Economic Espionage; Trade Secret Misappropriation; Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations; OCIE; Financial Industry Regulatory Authority; FINRA; broker-dealer; Risk Alert; Regulation S-P; Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act; GLBA; Computer Fraud and Abuse Act; CFAA; protected computer; United States v. Valle; Electronic Communications Privacy Act; ECPA; The Wiretap Act; The Stored Communications Act; SCA; The Pen Registry Act; Federal Trade Commission; FTC; Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation; FDIC; Federal Reserve; Economic Espionage Act; EEA; Defend Trade Secrets Act; DTSA; Huawei Technologies Co.; Cybersecurity Disclosure Act of 2017 and 2018; common law; class action; standing; Rule 23(a); 23(b)(3); negligence; breach of contract; derivative shareholder suits; Wyndham Worldwide Corporation; Regulatory Systems Compliance and Integrity; SCI; Regulation S-ID; Regulation S-P; General Disclosure Provisions; 503(c); Regulation S-K; Description of Business; financial statements; Framework for Improving Critical Infrastructure Cybersecurity; compliance; disaster plan; plaintext; ciphertext; crisis management; due diligence; The Protecting Cyber Networks Act; PCNA; National Cybersecurity Protection Advancement Act of 2015; NCPAA; The Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act; CISA; Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board; Department of Homeland Security; DHS; National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center; NCIC; U.S. Chamber of Commerce Leadership Council; (1)
- Image and Likeness; NIL; NCAA; College football; student-athlete; COVID-19; Nationa Collegiate Athletic Association; Fair Pay to Play Act; California Statute SB206; Gavin Newsom; Carnegie Foundtion; college football; intercollegiate sport; amateurism; scholarship; Sherman Antitrust Act; monopoly; Standard Oil v. U.S.; NCAA v. Board of Regents; market; videogames; archival footage; licenses; group licenses; Commerce Clause; Dormant Commerce Clause; NCAA v. Miller; contract; legislation; implementation; independent third party; clearinghouse; negotiate; appeal; title IX; (1)
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- O'Bannon v. NCAA; Sherman Anti-Trust Act; Name (1)
- Pandemic; COVID-19; global; public health; economic and financial crisis; markets; corporations; directors' duty of care; fiduciary duty; small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs); comparative law; board of directors; civil law; Anglo-American law; corporate governance; venture capital-backed firms; family business firms; United States; Delaware; United Kingdom; Germany; France; Italy; The Netherlands; Gross Domestic Product (GDP); European Union; shareholders; venture capital; capitalism (1)
- Silk Road; China; Asia; Economic Corridor; Infrastructure development; project; financing; debt; equity; Public-private partnership; Build-Own-Operate; debt-trap; framework; regulatory; debt-distress; banks; commercial loans; trade; project-to-project risk; public sector; private sector; risk allocation; interconnected; series; interational organizations (1)
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Articles 1 - 9 of 9
Full-Text Articles in Law
Directors’ Duty Of Care In Times Of Financial Distress Following The Global Epidemic Crisis, Leon Yehuda Anidjar
Directors’ Duty Of Care In Times Of Financial Distress Following The Global Epidemic Crisis, Leon Yehuda Anidjar
Brooklyn Journal of International Law
The global COVID-19 pandemic is causing the large-scale end of life and severe human suffering globally. This massive public health crisis created a significant economic crisis and is reflected in a recession of global production and the collapse of confidence in the functions of markets. Corporations and boards of directors around the world are required to design specific strategies to tackle the negative consequences of the crisis. This is especially true for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) that suffered tremendous economic loss, and their continued existence as ongoing concern is under considerable risk. Given these uncertain financial times, this Article …
The Modern Pay For Play Model: Laws That Protect Student-Athletes' Fundamental Right To Commercialze Their Names, Images, And Likeness, Paul A. Schwabe Jr.
The Modern Pay For Play Model: Laws That Protect Student-Athletes' Fundamental Right To Commercialze Their Names, Images, And Likeness, Paul A. Schwabe Jr.
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
In O’Bannon v. NCAA, the United States District Court for the Northern District of California entered a permanent injunction against the National Collegiate Athletic Association enjoining the collegiate sports governing body from enforcing limits on student-athlete compensation derived from the use of their name, images, and likenesses rights. The court concluded that NCAA rules unreasonably restrained trade in violation of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, however, neither the court nor the NCAA laid out a framework for lawfully implementing these new economic rights to student-athletes. Since that ruling, only one state’s legislature, California, has attempted to pass legislation to prevent the …
Preserving Fabled Amateurism: The Benefits Of The Ncaa’S Adoption Of The Olympic Amateurism Model, John Kealey
Preserving Fabled Amateurism: The Benefits Of The Ncaa’S Adoption Of The Olympic Amateurism Model, John Kealey
Journal of Law and Policy
After a century of denying student-athletes from receiving compensation outside the cost of attendance for their athletic contributions to their respective universities, the NCAA finally announced it would change its amateurism rule. The change came in response to multiple class action lawsuits and, more recently, legislation from many states, namely California and New York, which would have mandated that universities do not interfere with student-athletes desire to commercially exploit their own names, image, and likenesses. However, these statutes are potentially flawed in that each could exacerbate or perpetuate the anti-trust and first amendment issues inherent to the current amateurism rule. …
The Criminal, Regulatory, And Civil Issues Surrounding Intellectual Property And Cybersecurity, Ernest Edward Badway, Christie Mcguinness
The Criminal, Regulatory, And Civil Issues Surrounding Intellectual Property And Cybersecurity, Ernest Edward Badway, Christie Mcguinness
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
Cyber-attacks have affected all organizations and individual consumers. Dissemination of relevant information and attention to strong information security practices is an important tool in fighting this cyber “pandemic.” Additionally, the legal and regulatory liability companies face from cyber-attacks as well as general strategies and practical solutions companies may implement to protect against cyber-intrusions and respond effectively in the event of an attack are considered. There are many iterations of cyber-crime, and we address the various methods cybercriminals use and the many ways cyber-attacks can take place, as well as the entities and victims affected. Moreover, the legal liability and regulatory …
China's Belt And Road Initiative: An Examination Of Project Financing Issues And Alternatives, August Nelson Dinwiddie
China's Belt And Road Initiative: An Examination Of Project Financing Issues And Alternatives, August Nelson Dinwiddie
Brooklyn Journal of International Law
In 2013, China launched the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) to realize the vision of revitalizing the ancient Silk Road. The BRI can be characterized as a vast infrastructure development initiative spanning over sixty-five countries that total almost half of the world's GDP. Since its launch, BRI projects have primarily been financed through commercial loans provided by Chinese banks, creating concerns over debt sustainability. At the top of these concerns are fears over whether participation in the BRI will lead to a "debt-trap scenaro." Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) provide an alternative financing option. In project development under a PPP, particularly the …
Lying And Cheating, Or Self-Help And Civil Disobedience?, Aditi Bagchi
Lying And Cheating, Or Self-Help And Civil Disobedience?, Aditi Bagchi
Brooklyn Law Review
May poor sellers lie to rich buyers? This article argues that, under limited circumstances, sellers may indeed have a license to lie about their goods. Where sellers are losers under unjust background institutions and they reasonably believe that buyers have more than they would under just institutions, lies that result in de minimum transfers can be regarded as a kind of self-help. More generally, what we owe each other in our interpersonal interactions depends on the institutional backdrop. Consumer contract law, including its enforcement regimes, should recognize the social and political contingency of sellers’ obligations to buyers. In other contexts, …
The Impossibility Doctrine In Commercial Contracts: An Empirical Analysis, Uri Benoliel
The Impossibility Doctrine In Commercial Contracts: An Empirical Analysis, Uri Benoliel
Brooklyn Law Review
The impossibility doctrine – under which a contracting party has no duty to perform the agreement if performance thereof is rendered impossible – is a basic building block of U.S. contract law. The prevailing law-and-economics analysis of this doctrine suggests that when contract performance becomes impossible, courts should assign the contractual risk of non-performance to the superior risk bearer, i.e., to the party that can bear said risk at least cost. This article empirically tests, for the first time, the economic theory of the impossibility doctrine. It first hypothesizes that most sophisticated parties to commercial contracts are unlikely to adopt …
Revisiting A Classic Problem In Statutory Interpretation: Is A Minister A Laborer?, Lawrence Solan, Tammy Gales
Revisiting A Classic Problem In Statutory Interpretation: Is A Minister A Laborer?, Lawrence Solan, Tammy Gales
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Investment Misconceived: The Investment-Commerce Distinction In International Investment Law, Stratos Pahis
Investment Misconceived: The Investment-Commerce Distinction In International Investment Law, Stratos Pahis
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.