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Articles 121 - 144 of 144
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Economics Of Sports Leagues - The Chicago Bulls Case, Franklin M. Fisher, Christopher Maxwell, Evan Sue Schouten
The Economics Of Sports Leagues - The Chicago Bulls Case, Franklin M. Fisher, Christopher Maxwell, Evan Sue Schouten
Marquette Sports Law Review
No abstract provided.
Panel Iii: Current Status Of Time Warner V. City Of New York, David B. Goldin, Robert D. Joffe, Robert T. Perry, Ned H. Rosenthal
Panel Iii: Current Status Of Time Warner V. City Of New York, David B. Goldin, Robert D. Joffe, Robert T. Perry, Ned H. Rosenthal
Fordham Intellectual Property, Media and Entertainment Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Raising The Standard: Antitrust Scrutiny Of Standard-Setting Consortia In High Technology Industries, Douglas D. Leeds
Raising The Standard: Antitrust Scrutiny Of Standard-Setting Consortia In High Technology Industries, Douglas D. Leeds
Fordham Intellectual Property, Media and Entertainment Law Journal
No abstract provided.
We'll Take The Yankees: Assessing The Feasibility Of State Condemnation Of Baseball's Greatest Franchise, Rafael A. Declet Jr.
We'll Take The Yankees: Assessing The Feasibility Of State Condemnation Of Baseball's Greatest Franchise, Rafael A. Declet Jr.
Marquette Sports Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Misunderstood Alliance Between Sports Fans, Players, And The Antitrust Laws, Stephen F. Ross
The Misunderstood Alliance Between Sports Fans, Players, And The Antitrust Laws, Stephen F. Ross
Journal Articles
The baseball strike and the ongoing hostilities between the players' association and owners have evoked criticism and frustration among fans and others. Although the players successfully defeated the owners' most recent attempts to reduce major league competition, the threat of future imposition of competitive restraints by the owners remains. In this article Professor Stephen F. Ross argues that blanket restraints on the market for players affirmatively inhibit on-the-field competition and consequently offend the Sherman Act.
The article begins with the proposition that monopsony - price-fixing behavior by buyers', rather than sellers' cartels - implicates the Sherman Act. Restraints on competition …
Professional Sports Franchise Relocations From Private Law And Public Law Perspectives: Balancing Marketplace Competition, League Autonomy, And The Need For A Level Playing Field, Matthew J. Mitten, Bruce W. Burton
Professional Sports Franchise Relocations From Private Law And Public Law Perspectives: Balancing Marketplace Competition, League Autonomy, And The Need For A Level Playing Field, Matthew J. Mitten, Bruce W. Burton
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.
Communication Breakdown: Developing An Antitrust Model For Multimedia Mergers And Acquisitions, H. Peter Nesvold
Communication Breakdown: Developing An Antitrust Model For Multimedia Mergers And Acquisitions, H. Peter Nesvold
Fordham Intellectual Property, Media and Entertainment Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Panel I: The Changing Landscape Of Jurisprudence In Light Of The New Communications And Media Alliances, Creighton O'M. Condon, Robert D. Joffe, Nicholas J. Jollymore, John R. Tyler
Panel I: The Changing Landscape Of Jurisprudence In Light Of The New Communications And Media Alliances, Creighton O'M. Condon, Robert D. Joffe, Nicholas J. Jollymore, John R. Tyler
Fordham Intellectual Property, Media and Entertainment Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Nfl Network Blackouts: Old Law Meets New Technology With The Advent Of The Satellite Dish, Alan Fecteau
Nfl Network Blackouts: Old Law Meets New Technology With The Advent Of The Satellite Dish, Alan Fecteau
Marquette Sports Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Amateur Sports Draft: The Best Means To The End?, Jeffrey A. Rosenthal
The Amateur Sports Draft: The Best Means To The End?, Jeffrey A. Rosenthal
Marquette Sports Law Review
No abstract provided.
Reconsidering Flood V. Kuhn, Stephen F. Ross
Reconsidering Flood V. Kuhn, Stephen F. Ross
Journal Articles
Within the academia, two very different groups of legal scholars have devoted a great deal of attention to Flood v. Kuhn. Those specializing in sports law have either attached Flood as a ridiculous decision that improperly distinguished between baseball and other professional sports, or have praised it for waging guerrilla warfare on the idea that Section 1 of the Sherman Act should apply to intra-league arrangements by owners of the professional sports teams. Those viewing Flood through the lens of statutory interpretation perceive the decision as adhering rigidly to the principle of stare decisis; this rigidity has been …
Is This The Bottom Of The Ninth For Baseball's Antitrust Exemption - A Proposed Removal Of The Exemption And Analysis Of Player Restraints In An Exemption-Free Environment, Brian F. Zeck
Cleveland State Law Review
This note will describe the creation and development of the antitrust exemption granted to Major League Baseball and the continuing vitality of that exemption with respect to labor relations. Part I will detail the creation of the antitrust exemption, the tests articulated by the Supreme Court to determine whether a particular industry violates the antitrust laws, an application of those tests to baseball, and the possibility of finally removing this exemption through legislation in order to bring the law for the industry of baseball into line with other industries. Part II will discuss how the antitrust laws and labor laws …
Fair Or Foul? The Survival Of Small-Market Teams In Major League Baseball, Kevin E. Martens
Fair Or Foul? The Survival Of Small-Market Teams In Major League Baseball, Kevin E. Martens
Marquette Sports Law Review
No abstract provided.
Step Up To The Scale: Wages And Unions In The Sports Industry, Darryl Hale
Step Up To The Scale: Wages And Unions In The Sports Industry, Darryl Hale
Marquette Sports Law Review
No abstract provided.
Antitrust And Baseball – A League Of Their Own, Y. Shukie Grossman
Antitrust And Baseball – A League Of Their Own, Y. Shukie Grossman
Fordham Intellectual Property, Media and Entertainment Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Interpreting The Nfl Player Contract, Gary R. Roberts
Interpreting The Nfl Player Contract, Gary R. Roberts
Marquette Sports Law Review
No abstract provided.
Heads I Win, Tails You Lose: A Study Of Antitrust Jurisprudence In The Federal Circuit, Steven W. Heller
Heads I Win, Tails You Lose: A Study Of Antitrust Jurisprudence In The Federal Circuit, Steven W. Heller
Fordham Intellectual Property, Media and Entertainment Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Antitrust & Professional Sports' Eligibility Rules: The Past, The Present, And The Future, Cathy E. Shore
Antitrust & Professional Sports' Eligibility Rules: The Past, The Present, And The Future, Cathy E. Shore
Fordham Intellectual Property, Media and Entertainment Law Journal
No abstract provided.
An Antitrust Analysis Of Sports League Contracts With Cable Networks, Stephen F. Ross
An Antitrust Analysis Of Sports League Contracts With Cable Networks, Stephen F. Ross
Journal Articles
This Article discusses the proper antitrust treatment of package sales to cable. Part I considers whether the antitrust laws apply at all to such sales; it concludes that section one of the Sherman Act does apply and that neither the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 not baseball's historic exemption from the antitrust laws prevents antitrust scrutiny of these contracts. Part II explains why cable package sales should be analyzed under a rule of reason test focused on the effect of a sale on fan viewership. Finally, Part III responds to several possible objections to the rule of reason standard proposed …
Cable Traffic And The First Amendment Must-Carry Under A Diversity Approach And Antitrust As Possible Alternative, Bruno Vandermeulen
Cable Traffic And The First Amendment Must-Carry Under A Diversity Approach And Antitrust As Possible Alternative, Bruno Vandermeulen
LLM Theses and Essays
Recent technological progress in the field of telecommunications has greatly changed the competitive structure between broadcasters, cable operators, and telephone companies. The legal and economic environment for these media participants has shifted, and new problems have arisen. One major problem is the enhanced threat of concentration of media corporations, as corporate bigness becomes desirable and the number of diversified owners of media outlets continues to decrease. This paper analyzes broadcasting regulations and subsequent case law to show the concern by the legislature and regulatory agencies to preserve diversity in opinion and media-ownership through emphasis on “localism” and a “marketplace of …
Monopoly Sports Leagues, Stephen F. Ross
Monopoly Sports Leagues, Stephen F. Ross
Journal Articles
This Article argues that the government should break up both Major League Baseball and the NFL to provide for competing economic entities in each sport. Part I details the harm monopoly sports leagues cause in several different markets and explains why a competitive league structure can correct such harms. Part II discusses why regulatory solutions are poor substitutes for competition as a means of redressing these harms. Part III explains why neither baseball nor football is a "natural monopoly" and argues that no persuasive evidence suggests that rival leagues cannot exist in those sports. Part IV examines how the antitrust …
"Don't Talk Of Fairness": The Chicago School's Approach Toward Disciplining Professional Athletes, Robert H. Heidt
"Don't Talk Of Fairness": The Chicago School's Approach Toward Disciplining Professional Athletes, Robert H. Heidt
Indiana Law Journal
SYMPOSIUM: Antitrust Issues In Amateur Sports
Held at Indiana University School of Law - March 1985
Professional Sports And Antitrust Law: The Groundrules Of Immunity, Exemption And Liability, Phillip J. Closius
Professional Sports And Antitrust Law: The Groundrules Of Immunity, Exemption And Liability, Phillip J. Closius
All Faculty Scholarship
As professional sports leagues increased their wealth and national prominence, the federal judicial system became uncomfortable with its characterization of sports as something other than a business. The Supreme Court reflected this change in policy in the 1950s by refusing to extend baseball's antitrust exemption to other sports. The application of the Sherman Act to all nonbaseball sports established the foundation for the forceful imposition of antitrust constraints on team owners in the sports litigation of the 1970s. These "revolutionary" decisions substantially eliminated the status of sports as a game or amusement insulated from the legal obligations of profit-making industries. …
The Moving Picture Anti-Trust Cases, Thomas F. Broden
The Moving Picture Anti-Trust Cases, Thomas F. Broden
Journal Articles
United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., et al. involves a consideration by the Supreme Court of The United States of the guilt of a vast segment of the nation-wide movie industry of a district court conviction of re- straining and monopolizing interstate trade in the distribution and exhibition of films. Not only were the violations of the Sherman Act by the largest moving picture film distributors of the country in issue, but a more difficult problem, that of what to do about the violations, was presented to the Supreme Court for its consideration.
From a reading of the majority opinion …