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Also available as
eBook.
Sport is life, fun, passion but also business. It is not easy to draw a
bright line between sport as an economic activity and sport as a crucial
cultural element of society. In Europe, the stakes are prodigious from either
perspective. On the one hand, sport represents 4% of the GDP of the European
Union; on the other, there are in the EU more than 800,000 sport clubs with
more than 70 million members. In numerous ways, the former depends on the
latter, giving rise to a plethora of subtle tensions. For decades the EU
institutions have struggled with the legal issues that arise from these
tensions, and the debate has come to be encapsulated in the complex concepts
of the ‘sport exception’ and the ‘specificity of sport.’ Now, the pending
Reform Treaty, if ratified, will finally provide a legal basis for a Community
action in the field of sport.
This new collection of essays presents nine well-informed and insightful
analyses of the ‘specificity’ debate from several distinct points of view. The
book reprints the papers presented by outstanding academics as well as
representatives of the sport world at a conference on the ‘Future of Sport in
the European Union’ held at the Catholic University of Brussels in December
2007. The authors examine the legal and political issues related to the latest
developments at the EU level, and their impact on the sport organisations, in
order to better understand the future of sport and to answer the questions
which will inevitably arise from the new situation.
Among the topics arising in the course of the presentations are the following:
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pure ‘sporting interest’ vs. ‘economic activities’ within the overall meaning
of Article 2 EC;
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whether the EU legal order in fact applies to sport activities;
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application of EC law to rules governing the composition of national sports
teams, especially as defined in Bosman and Meca Medina cases;
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relation of sport to freedom of association and the principle of subsidiarity;
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initiatives to share use of financial gains from television rights;
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role of bylaws and other regulations of federations at every level;
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responsibility of sport organisations vis-à-vis the rules of public order;
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freedom of labour and free movement of workers as applied to sportsmen and
sportswomen;
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the right to privacy, image included;
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the ‘European sport model’;
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protection of young sportsmen and sportswomen from commercial pressures; and
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economic and social role of volunteering activities in sport.
As an analysis of the future directions of EU sport law, this book provides an
in-depth assessment of the impact of current policy changes. At a time when a
new European treaty is being drafted, and when new questions on sport are
being referred to the European Court of Justice, these cogent analyses of
European law applicable to professional sport will be of great value to
professionals concerned with sport in any of its guises.
Features:
;
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First in-depth response to major new developments in European sport law
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Insightful analyses by outstanding legal authorities and people from the sport
world
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Thoroughly clarifies the meaning of the ‘specificity’ of sport in European law
Benefits:
;
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Provides deeply informed starting point for legislators, policymakers, and
jurists in developing future sport law in Europe
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Presents a wide variety of perspectives on all the crucial issues of European
sport law
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Expertly evaluates the potential impact and legal possibilities of the Reform
Treaty sport clause
Note on the Authors. Introduction. 1. The Specificity of Sport
from a Legal Perspective; R. Blanpain. 2. Future Directions of
EU Sports Law; F. Hendrickx. 3. The Future of Sport in the
European Union: Beyond the EU Reform Treaty and the White Paper; M. Colucci.
4. Is Sport “Special” under EU Law and Policy? R.
Siekmann. 5. Sport Governance and EU Legal Order: Present and
Future; M. Wathelet. 6. The European Commission’s White Paper on
Sport; P. Velazquez. 7. Football: On the Verge between Social
Event and Business Activity; I. Belet. 8. The Specificity of
Sport in the EU Policy; J. Zylberstein. 9. The Specificity of
Sport in the CAS Jurisprudence; J. de Dios Crespo Pérez.
Conclusion. Annexes: 1. EU Reform Treaty (excerpts). 2. European
Commission’s White Paper. 3. European Parliament: The Future of
Professional Football in the European Union. 4. European Court of
Justice: Meca Medina Case.
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