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Gender, athletes' rights, and the Court of Arbitration for Sport /

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'...

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Bibliographic Details
Call Number:Libro Electrónico
Main Author: Lenskyj, Helen (Author)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:Inglés
Published: Bingley, UK : Emerald Publishing Limited, 2018.
Edition:First edition.
Series:Emerald studies in sport and gender.
Subjects:
Online Access:Texto completo
Texto completo
Table of Contents:
  • 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.