The Editors of the International Sports Law Journal (ISLJ) invite you to submit abstracts for the next edition of the ISLJ Conference on International Sports Law, which will take place on 24 and 25 October 2024 at the Asser Institute in The Hague. The ISLJ, published by Springer and TMC Asser Press, is the leading academic publication in the field of international sports law and the conference is a unique occasion to discuss the main legal issues affecting international sports and its governance with renowned academic experts.
We welcome abstracts from academics and practitioners on all issues related to international and transnational sports law and their impact on the governance of sport. We also welcome panel proposals (including a minimum of three presenters) on specific issues of interest to the Journal and its readers. For this year’s edition, we specifically invite submissions on the following themes and subthemes:
Reformism in transnational sports governance: Drivers and impacts
- Legal and social drivers of reforms in transnational sports governance
- The role of strategic litigation (before the EU/ECtHR/National courts) as a driver of reform;
- The role of public/fan pressure groups on clubs, competition organisers and governments as a driver of change.
- The impact of internal reforms in transnational sports governance: Cosmetic or real change? (e.g. IOC Agenda 2020+5, FIFA governance reforms, CAS post-Pechstein changes, WADA sfter the Russian doping scandal)
- Emerging alternatives to private sports governance – the UK’s Independent Football Regulator.
The organization and regulation of mega sporting events: Current and future challenges
- Mega-sporting events as legalized sites of digital surveillance
- Greening mega-sporting events (e.g. carbon neutral pledges, environmental footprints of events, the impact of multiple hosting sites)
- Mega-sporting events and the protection of human rights and labour rights (e.g. Paris 2024 Social Charter, Euro 2024 human rights commitments)
- The Olympic Games and athletes’ economic rights (remuneration/advertisement)
- Reviews of the legal issues raised at Euro 2024 in Germany and the Paris 2024 Olympic Games
- Previews of the legal issues likely to have an impact on the FIFA 2026 World Cup and the Milano-Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games
Please send your abstract of 300 words and CV no later than 15 July 2024 to a.duval@asser.nl. Selected speakers will be informed by 30 July.
The selected participants will be expected to submit a draft of their paper by 1 October 2024. Papers accepted and presented at the conference are eligible for publication in a special issue of the ISLJ, subject to peer-review.
The Asser Institute will provide a limited number of travel & accommodation grants (max. 300€). If you wish to be considered for a grant, please explain why in your submission.
Sport events, especially when they are of a global scale, have
been facing more and more questions about their impact on local
communities, the environment, and human rights.
It has become clear that their social legitimacy is not a
given, but must be earned by showing that sport events can positively
contribute to society. During this half-day conference, we will debate
the proposal of a European Social Charter for Sport Events in order to
achieve this goal.
In January 2021, a consortium of eight partners launched a
three-year project, supported by the European Commission under the
Erasmus+ scheme, aimed at devising a European Social Charter for Sport
Events (ESCSE). The project ambitions to develop a Charter which will
contribute to ensuring that sport events taking place in the European
Union are socially beneficial to the local communities concerned and,
more generally, to those affected by them. The project is directly
inspired by the decision of the Paris 2024 bid to commit to a social
charter enforced throughout the preparation and the course of the 2024
Olympics.
This first public event in the framework of the ESCSE project,
will be introducing the project to a wider public. During the event we
will review the current state of the implementation of the Paris 2024
Social Charter, discuss the expectations of stakeholders and academics
for a European Social Charter and present for feedback the first draft
of the ESCSE (and its implementing guidelines) developed by the project
members. It will be a participatory event; we welcome input from the
participants.
The Asser International Sports Law Centre, powered by the Asser
Institute, is contributing to the project through the drafting of a
background study, which we will introduce during the conference.
Please note that we can
provide some financial support (up to 100 euros) towards travel
and/or accommodation costs for a limited number of participants
coming from other EU Member States or the UK. To apply for this
financial support please reach out to ConferenceManager@asser.nl. `
Register HERE
Editor’s note:
Thomas Terraz is a fourth year LL.B. candidate at the International and
European Law programme at The Hague University of Applied Sciences with a
specialisation in European Law. Currently he is pursuing an internship at the
T.M.C. Asser Institute with a focus on International and European Sports Law.
1. Introduction
On
March 05, the T.M.C. Asser Institute hosted ‘Mega-sporting events and human
rights: What role can EU sports diplomacy play?’ a Multiplier Sporting Event
organized in the framework of a European research project on ‘Promoting a
Strategic Approach to EU Sports Diplomacy’. This project funded by the European
Commission through its Erasmus+ program aims to help the EU adopt a strategic approach to sports
diplomacy and to provide evidence of instances where sport can help amplify EU
diplomatic messages and forge better relations with third countries. In
particular, Antoine Duval from the Asser
Institute is focusing on the role of EU sports diplomacy to strengthen human rights in the
context of mega sporting events (MSE) both in Europe and abroad. To this end,
he organized the two panels of the day focusing, on the one hand, on the ability
of sport governing bodies (SGB) to leverage their diplomatic power to promote
human rights, particularly in the context of MSEs and, on the other, on the
EU’s role and capacity to strengthened human rights around MSEs. The following
report summarizes the main points raised during the discussions. More...
The upcoming 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar and its links
to human rights violations has been the subject of many debates in the
media and beyond. In particular, the respect of migrant workers’ labour
rights was at the forefront of much public criticisms directed against
FIFA. Similarly, past Olympics in Rio, Sochi or Beijing have also been
in the limelight for various human rights issues, such as the lack of
freedom of the press, systematic discrimination on the basis of sexual
orientation or forced evictions. These controversies have led sports
governing bodies (SGBs) to slowly embrace human rights as an integral
part of their core values and policies. Leading to an increased
expectation for SGBs to put their (private) diplomatic capital at the
service of human rights by using their leverage vis-à-vis host countries
of their mega-sporting events (MSEs). In turn, this also raises the
question of the need for the EU to accompany this change by putting
human rights at the heart of its own sports diplomacy.
Research collective
This Multiplier Sporting
Event, organised in the framework of the transnational project on
‘Promoting a Strategic Approach to EU Sports Diplomacy’ funded by the
Erasmus + Programme, aims to trigger discussions on the role of an EU
sports diplomacy in strengthening respect for human rights in the
context of MSEs both at home and abroad. It will feature two roundtables
focused on the one hand on the diplomatic power and capacity of SGBs to
fend for human rights during MSEs and on the other on the EU’s
integration of human rights considerations linked to MSEs in its own
sports diplomacy.
Programme
13:20 – 14:00 – Welcome and opening speech –Antoine Duval (Asser Institute)
14:00 - 15:30 - Panel 1: Leveraging the Diplomatic Power of the Sports Governing Bodies for Human Rights
- Lucy Amis (Unicef UK/Institute for Human Rights and Business)
- Guido Battaglia (Centre for Sport and Human Rights)
- Florian Kirschner (World Players Association/UNI Global Union)
- Claire Jenkin (University of Hertfordshire)
15:30 – 16:00 - Coffee Break
16:00 - 17:30 - Panel 2: A Human Rights Dimension for the EU’s Sports Diplomacy?
- Arnout Geeraert (Utrecht University)
- Agata Dziarnowska (European Commission)
- Alexandre Mestre (Sport and Citizenship)
- Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport (TBC)
17:30 - Reception
Call for papers: Annual International Sports Law Conference of the International Sports Law Journal
Asser Institute, The Hague
25 and 26 October 2018
The editorial board of the International Sports Law Journal (ISLJ) is inviting you to submit abstracts for its second ISLJ Annual Conference on International Sports Law, which will take place on 25 and 26 October at the Asser Institute in The Hague. The ISLJ published by Springer in collaboration with Asser Press is the leading academic publication in the field of international sports law. Its readership includes academics and many practitioners active in the field. This call is open to researchers as well as practitioners.
We are also delighted to announce that Prof. Franck Latty (Université Paris Nanterre), Prof. Margareta Baddeley (Université de Genève), and Silvia Schenk (member of FIFA’s Human Rights Advisory Board) have confirmed their participation as keynote speakers.
Abstracts could, for example, tackle questions linked to the following international sports law subjects:
- The interaction between EU law and sport
- Antitrust and sports regulation
- International sports arbitration (CAS, BAT, etc.)
- The functioning of the world anti-doping system (WADA, WADC, etc.)
- The global governance of sports
- The regulation of mega sporting events (Olympics, FIFA World Cup, etc.)
- The transnational regulation of football (e.g. the operation of the FIFA Regulations on the Status and Transfer of Players or the UEFA Financial Fair Play Regulations)
- The global fight against corruption in sport
- Comparative sports law
- Human rights in sport
Please send your abstract (no more than 300 words) and CV no later than 30 April 2018 to a.duval@asser.nl. Selected speakers will be informed by 15 May.
The selected participants will be expected to submit a draft paper by 1 September 2018. All papers presented at the conference are eligible for publication in a special edition of the ISLJ. To be considered for inclusion in the conference edition of the journal, the final draft must be submitted for review by 15 December 2018. Submissions after this date will be considered for publication in later editions of the Journal.
The Asser Institute will cover one night accommodation for the speakers and will provide a limited amount of travel grants (max. 300€). If you wish to be considered for a grant please justify your request in your submission.