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With a Foreword by Roger Blanpain, Professor in Labour Law, Universities of Leuven (Belgium) and Tilburg (The Netherlands) and co-founder and first President of FIFPro.
Publicly, at least, there appears to be a strong collective will within football to clean up the game, to make the work of players' agents more transparent and to allow a greater share of the game's profits to stay within the game. Privately, there seems to be unease that current agent regulation is out of step with football industry norms and that if the sector is to operate effectively, practices which are prohibited by the rules should in fact be tolerated. Here lies the problem. Stringent agent regulation may well look impressive but over-regulation will merely compound the problem of non-compliance and a lack of transparency. Finding the balance which not only addresses the problems facing football and satisfies the supporters and other interested stakeholders but which also satisfies the requirements of national, EU and international law is just one of the many challenges facing football's governing bodies.
What are players' agents? Why should they be regulated? How should they be regulated? These three apparently simple questions have been tackled throughout this book. The first question appears straightforward as agents perform similar functions throughout the world. However, as the contributions in the book reveal, the manner in which agents operate varies. The questions of why and how to regulate again reveals common themes but also considerable variations in patterns of regulation. In this connection, there are, in effect, three tiers of agent regulation: international law, national law and the law of the sports associations.
This book covers the legal regulations governing players' agents in forty countries around the world, representing the major footballing constituencies including Argentina, Brazil, Mexico and Russia as well as the Big Five in Europe. Written by acknowledged experts, it provides a very useful and informative comparative survey. Indeed, this is a book, which all those involved in the administration of football clubs, particularly, coaches and managers, as well as players' agents themselves, and commercial, financial and legal advisers, can do hardly do without, as it will provide them with a constant and useful source of reference.
Auteur
Director of the ASSER International Sports Law Centre and senior adviser applied research of the T.M.C. Asser Institute for International Law, The Hague, The Netherlands. Lecturer, Department of Law and Criminology, at Edge Hill University, Ormskirk, United Kingdom. Research fellow at the ASSER International Sports Law Centre, Lecturer on Labour Law and Sport, University of Amsterdam, and general secretary of the newly established Dutch player's agents association Pro Agent. Senior fellow at the ASSER International Sports Law Centre.
Contenu
Regulating Players' Agents: A Global Perspective.- Regulating Players' Agents: A Global Perspective.- The International Supply Of Sports Agent Services.- The International Supply Of Sports Agent Services.- The Laurent Piau Case Of The Ecj on the Status of Players' Agents.- The Laurent Piau Case Of The Ecj on the Status of Players' Agents.- Country Reports.- Argentina.- Australia and New Zealand.- Austria.- Belarus.- Belgium.- Brazil.- Bulgaria.- Canada.- Czech Republic.- Estonia.- Finland.- France.- Germany.- Greece.- Hungary.- India.- Ireland.- Italy.- JAPAN.- KENYA.- LUXEMBOURG.- Macedonia.- Malta.- Mexico.- The Netherlands.- Poland.- Portugal.- Romania.- Russia.- Serbia.- SLOVAKIA.- Slovenia.- South Africa.- SPAIN.- SWEDEN.- Switzerland.- Turkey.- Ukraine.- United Kingdom.- United States.- United States.- United States.
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