The latest edition of the Elon Law Review features scholarship on sports law and the evolving policies and regulations surrounding collegiate athletics.

ARTICLES
Simplifying the Transformative Use Doctrine: Analyzing Transformative Expression in EA’s NCAA Football Sport Video Games – By Thomas A. Baker, Kevin K. Byon, John Grady & Beth A. Cianfrone
“It’s Not for a Grade”: The Rewards and Risks of Low-Risk Assessment in the High-Stakes Law School Classroom – By Olympia Duhart
Bib Brouhaha: Golf Caddies’ Lawsuit Challenges PGA Tour’s Compensation and Benefit Structure – By Robert A. Harris
The Right of Publicity and the Student-Athlete – James A. Johnson
New Policies, New Structure, New Problems? Reviewing the NCAA’s Autonomy Model – Anthony G. Weaver
NOTES
Asylum and the American Spirit: The Shift from Foreign Policy-Based Bias in Favor of Applicants from Enemy Countries to a Domestic Policy-Based Bias Against Applicants from “High-Risk” Countries – By Andrew Brower |
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Confined to a Concrete Cave: The Death Row Torture of Warren Lee Hill – By Kelly K. Holder |
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REMARKS
Amateurism and the Modern College Athlete – By Mike Ingersoll |
Read articles from Volume seven, issue two of the Elon Law Review here.