他们上课,不是吗?:构建大学橄榄球季后赛

Josephine R. Potuto
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摘要

第十四条修正案规定了程序上的正当程序、平等保护和实质性的权利法案保护。它适用于国家行为体,而不是私人行为体。NCAA是一个由大学和学院组成的协会,负责管理校际体育运动。它是一个私人演员。为了第十四条修正案的目的,最高法院有时将私人行为者视为国家行为者。NCAA不在其中。关于NCAA是否应该被视为国家行为体的讨论正在进行中。一方关注的是NCAA作为“镇上唯一的游戏”的垄断力量,以及它对非会员的影响,尤其是学生运动员,他们对其政策没有发言权。另一方担心,国家行为者的身份会带来旷日持久的、往往是琐碎的诉讼,并阻碍其提供公平竞争环境的能力,因为资格受到质疑的学生运动员可能会在诉讼未决期间参加比赛。双方都认同的传统观点是,NCAA的国家行为者地位必然会引发对NCAA程序的更大司法和立法监督;为非会员提供更多机会,以战胜所谓的NCAA过度扩张;对NCAA的运作方式进行根本性的、或许是广泛的改变。在我的文章中,我讨论了为什么传统智慧可能是错误的,并得出结论,NCAA对校际体育运动的监管机构在NCAA国家演员地位上的唯一明确后果是结束或至少取消NCAA给予女性和种族和少数民族优惠待遇的章程和政策。在所有其他方面,NCAA很可能能够照常进行。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
They Take Classes, Don't They?: Structuring a College Football Post Season
The fourteenth amendment affords procedural due process, equal protection, and substantive bill of rights protections. It applies to state actors, not private ones. The NCAA is an association of colleges and universities that regulates intercollegiate athletics. It is a private actor. On occasion the Supreme Court has treated private actors as state actors for purposes of the fourteenth amendment. The NCAA is not one of them. There is ongoing discussion whether the NCAA should be treated as a state actor. One side focuses on the NCAA’s monopoly power as "the only game in town" and its impact on non-members, particularly student-athletes, who have no say in its policies. The other side worries that state actor status would bring protracted and often frivolous lawsuits and thwart its ability to provide an even playing field because student-athletes whose eligibility is at issue could compete during pendency of litigation. The conventional wisdom, shared by both sides, is that NCAA state actor status necessarily would trigger greater judicial and legislative oversight of NCAA processes; substantially more opportunities for non-members to prevail against alleged NCAA over-reaching; and fundamental, perhaps widespread, change to the way the NCAA operates. In my article I discuss why the conventional wisdom likely is wrong, and conclude that the only clear consequence to the NCAA’s regulatory authority over intercollegiate athletics attendant on NCAA state actor status would be to end or at least cabin NCAA bylaws and policies that accord preferential treatment to women and racial and ethnic minorities. In all other ways the NCAA might well be able to proceed as usual.
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