Regulating the NCAA Making the calls under the Sherman Antitrust Act and Title IX

Regulating the NCAA Making the calls under the Sherman Antitrust Act and Title IX

Regulating the NCAA

Making the calls under the Sherman Antitrust Act and Title IX

Greene

Stephanie M.

Greene, Stephanie M.

Dept. of Business Law, Carroll School of Management

Author

Author

text

article

1999 1999 monographic

1999

1999

monographic

English eng

English

eng

electronic application/pdf digitized other analog

electronic

application/pdf

digitized other analog

This article explores college athletics in the context of lawsuits involving sex, race and disability, as well as antitrust challenges to the National Collegiate Athletic Association's rules. Courts have struggled in their application of relevant statutory laws to college athletic programs which are a hybrid with qualities of academic as well as private sector organizations. After surveying the legal landscape of legal challenges, the author concludes that when schools surrender and delegate control of their athletic programs to the NCAA, the NCAA's activities are more commercial in nature, thus triggering compliance with federal regulation.

Version of record.

Business Law Review 1051-175X 32 11 27 pp. 11-27 Spring 1999

Business Law Review

Business Law Review

1051-175X

32 11 27 pp. 11-27 Spring 1999

32

32

11 27 pp. 11-27

11

27

pp. 11-27

Spring 1999

Use of this resource is governed by the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons "Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States" (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/)

Business Law BLR-v32-Greene-p11-QC.pdf businessLawGlobalPermission.pdf businessLaw.jpg

Business Law

BLR-v32-Greene-p11-QC.pdf

businessLawGlobalPermission.pdf

businessLaw.jpg

MChB English eng

MChB

English eng

English

eng