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The Legal Status of Sportsmen and Sportswomen under International, European and Belgian National and Regional Law (Studies in Employment and Social Policy) (Hardback)
$181.86 - Free shipping worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 7 days | |Short Description for The Legal Status of Sportsmen and Sportswomen under International, European and Belgian National and Regional LawAlthough the European Court of Justice ruled in Bosman (1995) that professional sportsmen and sportswomen are free at the end of their contracts, they are still at the mercy of the clubs that employ them. Such pretexts as the 'special nature' of sport - publicly urged by such European eminences as Tony Blair and Gerhard Schroder - have institutionalized the human trafficking of players, depriving ...
Full description- Publisher: Kluwer Law International
- Published: 21 February 2003
- Format: Hardback 306 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Comparative Law | International Law | Public International Law | Employment & Labour Law | Sport & The Law | Social Security & Welfare Law | Football (Soccer, Association Football)
- ISBN 13: 9789041119803 ISBN 10: 9041119809
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Full description for The Legal Status of Sportsmen and Sportswomen under International, European and Belgian National and Regional Law
Although the European Court of Justice ruled in Bosman (1995) that professional sportsmen and sportswomen are free at the end of their contracts, they are still at the mercy of the clubs that employ them. Such pretexts as the 'special nature' of sport - publicly urged by such European eminences as Tony Blair and Gerhard Schroder - have institutionalized the human trafficking of players, depriving them of basic rights guaranteed under all the laws enjoyed by Europeans. They may be well-paid as long as they are in the limelight, but they have no surety. They can be, and are, bought and sold repeatedly, each time returning profits to those who trade in their athletic prowess. In this searing indictment, Professor Blanpain underscores the demonstrable illegality of the current transfer system imposed by the International Federation of Football Associations (FIFA). In abundant detail he describes the complex ramifications of FIFA's rules in the lives of players, clearly revealing how the fundamental rights of players to free movement and freedom of labour are systematically denied. He calls for the courts, from the European Court of Justice on down, to recognize this illegality and act to enforce the Bosman Judgment. An extensive array of documents, including the FIFA Transfer Regulations and material leading to the March 2001 agreement between FIFA and the European Commission, is included in a series of annexes. The Legal Status of Sportsmen and Sportswomen is a signal contribution to an important debate concerning a major problem, the effects of which resound from the personal through every level of community all the way to international relations, and concerned judges will ignore itsanalysis and recommendations at their peril.

