In the current issue of Journal of College and University Law, University of Massachusetts professors Todd Crosset and Lisa Masteralexis suggest that state regulation of gender equity in college athletics is "on the brink of change." They argue that sociologically speaking, the state regulates private associations only when certain conditions are met -- conditions which existed in 1972 when Title IX was passed, but are increasingly less relevant today. Expanding alternatives to intercollegiate sports for participants, the increasing commercialization of college sport, and the decreasing educational relevance of college sports, they argue, have all made it less likely that the state will continue to intervene in private, institutional affairs by legislating gender equity, and more likely that market forces will take over.
Citation: Todd Crosset & Lisa Masteralexis, The Changing Collective Definition of Collegiate Sport and the Potential Demise of Title IX Protections, 34 J. College & Univ. L. 671 (2008).
An interdisciplinary resource for news, legal developments, commentary, and scholarship about Title IX, the federal statute prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sex in federally funded schools.
Department of Energy is making Title IX rules?
In one of the more curious things I have seen in regard to Title IX rule-making, the Department of Energy is attempting to issue a change t...
-
In one of the more curious things I have seen in regard to Title IX rule-making, the Department of Energy is attempting to issue a change t...
-
Three former employees of Feather River College (Quincy, California) pressed their Title IX retaliation claims at a two-week hearing before...
-
...and a sort of validation of my earlier prediction. Last week's multi-billion settlement (still in need of final approval by the judg...