A Supreme Court decision in June and actions by Congress, state legislatures, and the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) enable college student-athletes the freedom to receive compensation for their Name, Image and Likeness (NIL). To examine what these decisions mean for the future of college athletics, Gardner-Webb University President Dr. William M. Downs recently invited an expert panel to discuss the topic for the first Webb Connections event of the semester.https://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/gardner-webb-newscenter-archive/3292/thumbnail.jp
Athletes competing at NCAA institutions acquired the ability to profit from the use of their name, i...
This note proposes a multifaceted approach for congressional intervention in the NIL market. While t...
The National Collegiate Athletic Association (“NCAA”) has regulated collegiate sports for over one h...
An intense debate began after the Supreme Court handed down its ruling that the National Collegiate ...
The Supreme Court ruled in June that the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) cannot limi...
The FAME Center and Cardozo Sports Law Society held a virtual panel on October 12 to discuss the rec...
88 pagesName, Image, and Likeness (NIL) is the largest impending change coming to intercollegiate at...
This thesis provides a holistic overview of the current NIL situation by placing an emphasis on the ...
College athletics is an ever-changing landscape and the most recent event to change that landscape i...
Players at academic institutions have found themselves on a winning streak lately. The flurry of ath...
For the past seventy years, intellectual property law’s right of publicity has allowed for celebriti...
Abstract: For the first time in the history of collegiate sports, college athletes can be compensate...
A new mixture of state laws and NCAA rules have provided athletes with varying degrees of new protec...
This thesis is an evaluation of a variety of aspects of the new Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) legi...
Dr. Joel Cormier, Department of Exercise and Sport Science One of the most heavily discussed topics ...
Athletes competing at NCAA institutions acquired the ability to profit from the use of their name, i...
This note proposes a multifaceted approach for congressional intervention in the NIL market. While t...
The National Collegiate Athletic Association (“NCAA”) has regulated collegiate sports for over one h...
An intense debate began after the Supreme Court handed down its ruling that the National Collegiate ...
The Supreme Court ruled in June that the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) cannot limi...
The FAME Center and Cardozo Sports Law Society held a virtual panel on October 12 to discuss the rec...
88 pagesName, Image, and Likeness (NIL) is the largest impending change coming to intercollegiate at...
This thesis provides a holistic overview of the current NIL situation by placing an emphasis on the ...
College athletics is an ever-changing landscape and the most recent event to change that landscape i...
Players at academic institutions have found themselves on a winning streak lately. The flurry of ath...
For the past seventy years, intellectual property law’s right of publicity has allowed for celebriti...
Abstract: For the first time in the history of collegiate sports, college athletes can be compensate...
A new mixture of state laws and NCAA rules have provided athletes with varying degrees of new protec...
This thesis is an evaluation of a variety of aspects of the new Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) legi...
Dr. Joel Cormier, Department of Exercise and Sport Science One of the most heavily discussed topics ...
Athletes competing at NCAA institutions acquired the ability to profit from the use of their name, i...
This note proposes a multifaceted approach for congressional intervention in the NIL market. While t...
The National Collegiate Athletic Association (“NCAA”) has regulated collegiate sports for over one h...