Grant-in-aid athletes in revenue-generating sports at Division I National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) institutions are not student-athletes as the NCAA asserts, but are, instead, employees under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). To be an employee under that Act, these athletes must meet both the common law test and a statutory test applicable to university students. In applying the common law test to athletes, we describe their daily lives through interviews with current and former Division I grant-in-aid athletes. These interviews demonstrate that their daily burdens and obligations not only meet the legal standard of employee, but far exceed the burdens and obligations of most university employees. In addressing the ...
Players at academic institutions have found themselves on a winning streak lately. The flurry of ath...
2021 Louise Halper Award Winner for Best Student Note The unrest revolving around compensation for c...
The amateurism principle governing college sports prohibits student-athletes from receiving compensa...
This article discusses whether college athletes should be considered employees under a broad range o...
As everyone involved in college athletics continues to profit off of the millions of dollars in tele...
Many individuals believe that the twenty-first century NCAA collegiate athlete should not be classif...
This paper will provide an overview of how National Labor Relations Board cases of Northwestern Univ...
While student-athletes are the backbone of the $11 billion college sports industry, they do not curr...
College sports is a huge industry; college teams are valued at hundreds of millions of dollars, if n...
The National Labor Relations Board ruled in Columbia University that student assistants who have a c...
In light of recent administrative developments urging the classification of student-athletes as empl...
This article analyzes the first case of college athlete unionization under the National Labor Relati...
The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and its member institutions have increasingly be...
This Comment examines the Ohio Workers\u27 Compensation Act 25 and its applicability to scholarship-...
An emerging labor and employment issue during the last decade—and one which has yet to be conclusive...
Players at academic institutions have found themselves on a winning streak lately. The flurry of ath...
2021 Louise Halper Award Winner for Best Student Note The unrest revolving around compensation for c...
The amateurism principle governing college sports prohibits student-athletes from receiving compensa...
This article discusses whether college athletes should be considered employees under a broad range o...
As everyone involved in college athletics continues to profit off of the millions of dollars in tele...
Many individuals believe that the twenty-first century NCAA collegiate athlete should not be classif...
This paper will provide an overview of how National Labor Relations Board cases of Northwestern Univ...
While student-athletes are the backbone of the $11 billion college sports industry, they do not curr...
College sports is a huge industry; college teams are valued at hundreds of millions of dollars, if n...
The National Labor Relations Board ruled in Columbia University that student assistants who have a c...
In light of recent administrative developments urging the classification of student-athletes as empl...
This article analyzes the first case of college athlete unionization under the National Labor Relati...
The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and its member institutions have increasingly be...
This Comment examines the Ohio Workers\u27 Compensation Act 25 and its applicability to scholarship-...
An emerging labor and employment issue during the last decade—and one which has yet to be conclusive...
Players at academic institutions have found themselves on a winning streak lately. The flurry of ath...
2021 Louise Halper Award Winner for Best Student Note The unrest revolving around compensation for c...
The amateurism principle governing college sports prohibits student-athletes from receiving compensa...