Sports Law: Risks and Resolving Disputes
Sports law is a growing and increasingly important area and involves significant personal, reputational and financial stakes. Learn how to successfully and timely navigate the complex regulatory, commercial and disciplinary challenges that you will come across in your practice. Gain an update on the sporting code of conduct, the various integrity risks associated with sports and how to effectively resolve your disputes when they arise. WEB233NZA32Z
Description
Attend and earn 3 CPD hours
Chair: Michael Heron KC, Britomart Chambers
9.30am to 10.30am Sporting Law Code of Conduct
- Code of conduct process
- Rules, hearings and objectives
Presented by Lee Robinson MNZM, Partner, Saunders Robinson Brown
10.30am to 11.30am Integrity Risks
- Anti-Doping Issues
- Changes in Integrity Regulation in NZ Sport
- Sports Governance
Presented by David Howman CNZM, Chairman of the Board of Directors at Athletics integrity Unit
11.30am to 12.30pm Resolution of Sporting Disputes
Presented by Ian Hunt, Partner, Young Hunter Lawyers
Learning Objectives:
- Understand the regulatory and legal landscape of the sports industry
- Learn the different risks that are associated to sports and the industry-specific regulations.
- Know how you can effectively resolve disputes when they arise.
Presenters
Michael Heron KC
Michael Heron KC is a leading KC in commercial and regulatory litigation and arbitrations. He is one of New Zealand’s leading KCs and is a trusted legal advisor to New Zealand businesses, government entities, and public bodies. Michael Heron KC has appeared as lead counsel in all New Zealand Courts and many tribunals. He was formerly New Zealand’s Solicitor General, CEO of the Crown Law Office and responsible for advice to all arms of government. Before that he was a partner at law firms Russell McVeagh and Meredith Connell. He worked in London and Tokyo as a solicitor for Allen & Overy and is admitted as a solicitor in England and Wales. His focus is on matters involving all arms of Government and its regulators; conducting independent inquiries, reviews and investigations (and providing advice on them); and sporting matters. He is chair of Immediation New Zealand Limited, an online dispute resolution service. He is a board member of NZ RegCo, the independent regulatory body for the New Zealand Stock Exchange (NZX). Michael is National Commissioner for New Zealand Cricket and a member of the International Cricket Council Code of Conduct Commission and Disputes Resolution Committee. He is a judicial officer for New Zealand Rugby and SANZAAR. He acts for a range of sport participants and is a member of the panel of mediators for Immediation’s Sport NZ mediation panel.
Lee Robinson MNZM
Lee is a Senior Partner and head of the Trusts & Estates Team at Saunders Robinson Brown. Lee has extensive experience in property, commercial, and business law. He is also a leading New Zealand Sports Lawyer with a particular focus on cricket. He has acted for national bodies and individual athletes as well as representing organisations on sporting projects such as the development of Hagley Oval for Cricket. Lee graduated from the University of Canterbury in 1975 and then spent three years working in the Land Titles office (now Land Information New Zealand) before joining another Christchurch firm in 1978. He became a partner with that firm in 1982 before forming Saunders Robinson Brown with Geoff Saunders and Bill Brown in November 2001.
David Howman CNZM
David is a sport integrity consultant in Wellington. He is the Chair of the Athletics Integrity Board, having been re-appointed to that position by the World Athletics Council in September 2019, the Chair of World Squash Ethics Commission, Deputy Chair of the International Tennis Federation Ethics Commission, and Chair of the International Cricket Council Anti-Corruption Oversight Group. David was a member of the Australian Government’s Panel reporting on Sport Integrity in 2018 and holds the position of Adjunct Professor at AUT. Nationally he is Chair of the Board for Cricket Wellington and was the Reviewer responsible for the report on Gymnastics New Zealand. David was Director General (more corporately named the CEO) of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), from August 2003 until July 2016, and was instrumental in the shaping of WADA into a highly respected and unified global organization responsible for regulating and monitoring world sport and world governments. Prior to his time at WADA David practised as a barrister specialising in sport law, and represented many prominent NZ players, referees and coaches. He was Chair of Tennis NZ, Fair Play Citing Commissioner for NZ Rugby and SANZAR, and on the Boards of the Hillary Commission and NZ Sports Foundation. With a large experience of governance at both local and national levels in sport in New Zealand, accompanying his vast international expertise and management skills, David brings a unique leadership capacity to all matters he is engaged in. David received a CNZM for services to sport in 2017.
Ian Hunt
Ian is a litigation partner with Young Hunter Lawyers in Christchurch. Ian has a wide range of experience in civil and commercial litigation areas and practices, primarily in the areas of insurance litigation, health law, trust law, professional ethics and discipline, and sports law, and has practised at all levels of the New Zealand Court system, and in the United Kingdom. He also has extensive experience in mediation and arbitration in the sporting context, and in appearing before tribunals including the Sports Tribunal of New Zealand and the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS). Ian is a member of the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), World Athletics Disciplinary Tribunal, Sport Resolutions International Panel, FIA Anti-Doping Disciplinary Committee, and the Commonwealth Games Federation Court for Birmingham 2022, and was a member of the inaugural FINA Ethics Panel and the World Aquatics ad hoc legal committee over the period 2013 - 2023. Ian's recent appointments as chair/member of various international disciplinary and dispute hearing panels have included the World Sailing Independent Panel, the Rugby League World Cup ad hoc Panel, the Billie Jean King Cup Finals Independent Tribunal, and within New Zealand for numerous sports. Ian was a director of High Performance Sport New Zealand (HPSNZ) for 6 and ½ years until December 2021, and is currently a director of Snow Sports New Zealand. Ian is also a lawyer member of the New Zealand Lawyers and Conveyancers Disciplinary Tribunal.