R. Rodenberg, Brian Tuohy, Richard Borghesi, Katarina Pijetlovic, S. Griffin
{"title":"Corruption and Manipulation in Sports: Interdisciplinary Perspectives","authors":"R. Rodenberg, Brian Tuohy, Richard Borghesi, Katarina Pijetlovic, S. Griffin","doi":"10.1089/GLRE.2013.1736","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"On October 12, 2012, Florida State University hosted a two-hour roundtable panel entitled “Corruption and Manipulation in Sports” in Tallahassee, Florida.1 Panelists included Rick Borghesi, Sean Patrick Griffin, Katarina Pijetlovic, Jeff Reel, and Brian Tuohy. Ryan Rodenberg moderated the multi-disciplinary symposium. The foci of the panel were two-fold. First, with integrity-related concerns central to the passage of the federal Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (“PASPA”) twenty years ago as a backdrop, speakers discussed discrete issues related to how sports can be corrupted and manipulated. Second, the panel sought to collectively provide a primer that academics and professionals working in the gaming or sports law realm could subsequently turn to as a guide. This paper represents an outgrowth of the panel, providing stand-alone pieces (by individual authors) on specific issues under the sports corruption/manipulation umbrella that were addressed during the symposium and relevant to legal and economic issues in the gaming sector, particularly sports-related gambling. The result is an article reflective of how sports-related corruption and manipulation is interdisciplinary in nature. Ryan Rodenberg, an assistant professor of sports law analytics at Florida State University, penned the introduction to this article. In it, his aim was to provide a high-level outline of the relevant issues with citations to authority and illustrative examples. Independent author Brian Tuohy’s contribution introduces his findings from over 400 Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) files pertaining to sports bribery that he obtained via a number of requests under the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”). University of South Florida associate professor of finance Rick Borghesi’s essay explains how he tested the so-called “widespread point shaving hypothesis” in college basketball. Tallin (Estonia) Law School professor Katarina Pijeltovic’s piece flags a number of important issues related to the “pandemic” of match-fixing in various European sports. Sean Patrick Griffin, an associate professor of criminal justice at Penn State Abington, provides an overview of the recent National Basketball Association (“NBA”) referee betting scandal and details his statistical analysis of line movements in connection therewith.","PeriodicalId":280037,"journal":{"name":"Law & Society: Legislation eJournal","volume":"18 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2013-04-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Law & Society: Legislation eJournal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1089/GLRE.2013.1736","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
On October 12, 2012, Florida State University hosted a two-hour roundtable panel entitled “Corruption and Manipulation in Sports” in Tallahassee, Florida.1 Panelists included Rick Borghesi, Sean Patrick Griffin, Katarina Pijetlovic, Jeff Reel, and Brian Tuohy. Ryan Rodenberg moderated the multi-disciplinary symposium. The foci of the panel were two-fold. First, with integrity-related concerns central to the passage of the federal Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (“PASPA”) twenty years ago as a backdrop, speakers discussed discrete issues related to how sports can be corrupted and manipulated. Second, the panel sought to collectively provide a primer that academics and professionals working in the gaming or sports law realm could subsequently turn to as a guide. This paper represents an outgrowth of the panel, providing stand-alone pieces (by individual authors) on specific issues under the sports corruption/manipulation umbrella that were addressed during the symposium and relevant to legal and economic issues in the gaming sector, particularly sports-related gambling. The result is an article reflective of how sports-related corruption and manipulation is interdisciplinary in nature. Ryan Rodenberg, an assistant professor of sports law analytics at Florida State University, penned the introduction to this article. In it, his aim was to provide a high-level outline of the relevant issues with citations to authority and illustrative examples. Independent author Brian Tuohy’s contribution introduces his findings from over 400 Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) files pertaining to sports bribery that he obtained via a number of requests under the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”). University of South Florida associate professor of finance Rick Borghesi’s essay explains how he tested the so-called “widespread point shaving hypothesis” in college basketball. Tallin (Estonia) Law School professor Katarina Pijeltovic’s piece flags a number of important issues related to the “pandemic” of match-fixing in various European sports. Sean Patrick Griffin, an associate professor of criminal justice at Penn State Abington, provides an overview of the recent National Basketball Association (“NBA”) referee betting scandal and details his statistical analysis of line movements in connection therewith.
2012年10月12日,佛罗里达州立大学在佛罗里达州塔拉哈西举办了一场题为“体育中的腐败和操纵”的两小时圆桌会议。1小组成员包括Rick Borghesi, Sean Patrick Griffin, Katarina Pijetlovic, Jeff Reel和Brian Tuohy。Ryan Rodenberg主持了多学科研讨会。面板的焦点是双重的。首先,以20年前通过的联邦职业和业余体育保护法(PASPA)为背景,演讲者讨论了与体育如何腐败和操纵有关的离散问题。其次,该小组试图共同提供一本入门书,供从事游戏或体育法律领域的学者和专业人士随后参考。本文代表了该小组的成果,提供了在研讨会期间讨论的体育腐败/操纵保护伞下的具体问题的独立文章(由个人作者撰写),并与游戏部门的法律和经济问题相关,特别是与体育相关的赌博。这篇文章反映了与体育相关的腐败和操纵在本质上是跨学科的。佛罗里达州立大学体育法律分析助理教授瑞恩·罗登伯格(Ryan Rodenberg)为这篇文章撰写了引言。在其中,他的目的是提供有关问题的高层次概述,引用权威和说明性的例子。独立作家Brian Tuohy的文章介绍了他从400多份联邦调查局(“FBI”)有关体育贿赂的文件中得出的发现,这些文件是他根据《信息自由法》(“FOIA”)的要求获得的。南佛罗里达大学金融学副教授Rick Borghesi在文章中解释了他如何在大学篮球中测试所谓的“广泛的分差假说”。塔林(爱沙尼亚)法学院教授Katarina Pijeltovic的文章指出了与欧洲各种体育运动中“普遍”操纵比赛有关的一些重要问题。宾夕法尼亚州立大学阿宾顿分校(Penn State Abington)刑事司法副教授肖恩·帕特里克·格里芬(Sean Patrick Griffin)概述了最近美国国家篮球协会(NBA)裁判下注丑闻,并详细介绍了他对与之相关的罚球动作的统计分析。