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Weekly Combine Newsletter: CAS releases bi-annual Bulletin and more

Weekly Combine Newsletter: CAS releases bi-annual Bulletin and more

This week the Court of Arbitration for Sport ('CAS') published online the latest edition of their bi-annual Bulletin for the second half of 2021. The Bulletin provides updates on the Court's operations, journal articles and a rare influx of important decisions of CAS disputes.

In the Bulletin's editorial, CAS confirmed that their offices will be relocating to its new headquarters in Palais de Beaulieu in Lausanne in March 2022 following the completion of the Winter Games. The Editor, Estelle de La Rochefoucauld, said the new headquarters are significantly more extensive, allowing them to effectively manage an increase in cases- almost 900 registered in 2021- they have received. According to the editorial, this increase means they will also be recruiting for new staff later during the year.

The Bulletin also features 11 'leading case' judgements (nine football and two doping) reflective of their casework and that had not previously been rendered publicly in their case database. Further, five summaries of the Swiss Federal Tribunal recent decisions connected with CAS matters and related to various sports are included.

Two scholarly articles are also featured in the Bulletin, one published in English and one in French. The first is titled 'Sports investigations in anti-doping matters', written by CAS Counsel Bjorn Hessert. The article details the make-up of investigations by anti-doping organisations, using the Sun Yang case as an example, and their consequences on athletes.

The second article, published in French, is about the role of defendants in arbitral proceedings before CAS and is co-authored by Pauline Pellaux, also CAS Counsel, and CAS Director-General Matthieu Reeb.

In the coming weeks, Sports Law Combine will produce articles relating to the most prominent previously unpublished awards and relevant decisions of the Swiss Federal Tribunal.

CAS Bulletin 2021/02

In case you missed our latest articles, here are Sports Law Combine's published articles from the past seven days.

First-person charged under Rodchenkov Act faces uncertain legal path
A Texas man who made headlines this week as the first person charged under recently created federal U.S. anti-doping legislation known as the Rodchenkov Act (‘RADA’) will face an unprecedented prosecution set to test RADA’s effectiveness of tackling institutionalised doping with criminal prosecution…
WADA rues Tokyo Olympics arbitrators lack of expertise, communication: seek improvement for future games
The World-Anti Doping Agency’s Independent Observers (‘WADA IO’s’) have criticised the Court of Arbitration for Sport (‘CAS’) appointment of some arbitrators who had “an insufficient level of anti-doping knowledge” in a 44-page report on anti-doping matters observed at last year’s Tokyo Olympics. Th…
Cricket South Africa, Mark Boucher face test of dismissal, discipline procedures in racism case
Cricket South Africa (‘CSA’) are pursuing the dismissal of their own men’s team national coach, Mark Boucher, accusing him of “racist or subliminally racist” conduct and bringing CSA into “disrepute,” according to a charge sheet provided to him last week. The strong rebuke from CSA comes before he f…

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