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Gender, Athletes' Rights, and the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
Title:
Gender, Athletes' Rights, and the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
Author:
Jefferson Lenskyj, Helen.
ISBN:
9781787439696
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (235 pages)
Series:
Emerald Studies in Sport and Gender Ser.
Contents:
Front Cover -- Gender, Athletes'rights, and The Court of Arbitration For sport -- Copyright Page -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- List of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- I.1. The Court of Arbitration for Sport -- I.2. Sports Law: Global Impacts -- I.3. Methodology -- Part I -- Chapter 1 Sports Law and the Court of Arbitration for Sport -- 1.1. Sports, Law, Politics -- 1.2. Alternative Dispute Resolution -- 1.2.1. ADR: A Feminist Alternative? -- 1.3. International Disputes: (Forced) Arbitration or Litigation? -- 1.4. IOC and CAS: Governance Issues -- 1.5. CAS Jurisdiction: Why? How? -- 1.6. A New Leaf? 1994 CAS Reforms -- 1.7. Repeat Parties - SGBs and Sports Lawyers -- 1.8. Conclusion -- Chapter 2 CAS and Sport Exceptionalism -- 2.1. Alternative Dispute Resolution and Confidentiality -- 2.2. Contribution to the Development of Law -- 2.3. The Costs Issue -- 2.4. Olympic Charter vs National Courts -- 2.5. CAS's Closed List Problem -- 2.6. Sport Autonomy and Sport Specificity Challenged -- 2.6.1. Impartiality: SFT Appeals -- 2.6.2. Benfica and Matuzalem -- 2.7. Sport Exceptionalism and EU Law -- 2.8. Conclusion -- Part II -- Chapter 3 The War on Doping -- 3.1. Nationalism -- 3.2. Global Anti-doping Efforts -- 3.3. Anti-doping Discourse -- 3.4. Legalized Doping? -- 3.5. Low Detection, High Surveillance -- 3.6. Strict Liability and the Criminalization of Doping -- 3.7. WADA Code: More Effective, More Intrusive -- 3.8. Second Chances or Life Bans? -- 3.9. Anti-doping Agencies and Governance Problems -- 3.10. Five Women, Five CAS Doping Decisions -- 3.11. Unresolved: Claudia Pechstein -- 3.12. The Russian Doping Controversy -- 3.12.1. IAAF vs Anna Pyatykh and RUSAF -- 3.12.2. CAS vs Oswald -- 3.13. Conclusion -- Chapter 4 Doping, Genes, and Gender -- 4.1. Gender Policing -- 4.2. The T Word: Testosterone -- 4.3. Hyperandrogenism.
4.3.1. A 'Retrospective Clinical Study' and Its Victims -- 4.3.2. Dutee Chand -- 4.4. Quantifying the Unquantifiable -- 4.5. Transgender Policies -- 4.5.1. Kristen Worley -- 4.6. 'Objective Science'? -- 4.7. T/E Tests and Racialized Men -- 4.8. Testosterone: Media Conspiracy Theories -- 4.9. 'Disrepute' Charges -- 4.9.1. Ross Rebagliati -- 4.10. Disrepute and Criminality: Some Australian Examples -- 4.11. Role Models, 'Race'/Ethnicity, and Gender -- 4.12. Conclusion -- Conclusion -- 5.1. Reform or Revolution? -- 5.2. An End to Sport Exceptionalism -- CAS Awards available at jurisprudence.tas-cas.org -- Swiss Federal Tribunal Awards English translations available at swissarbitrationdecisions.com -- Bibliography -- Index.
Abstract:
This book presents an interdisciplinary approach to examining gender-related sports dispute resolution by the Court of Arbitration. Identifying complexities around gender, gender binaries, and the ways in which intersecting identities complicate resolutions, the author demonstrate how athletes' rights are threatened by a forced arbitration process.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2020. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Genre:
Electronic Access:
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Shelf Number | Item Barcode | Shelf Location | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| HQ1101 -2030.7 | 1152322-1001 | Ebook Central | Searching... |
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