ACLI Case Notes Article
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Darryl Wilson, ACLI Case Notes, 1 American and Caribbean Law News 5 (2007)Clicking on the button will copy the full recommended citation.
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Darryl Wilson, ACLI Case Notes, 1 American and Caribbean Law News 5 (2007)Clicking on the button will copy the full recommended citation.
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Darryl Wilson, Myths and Misperceptions Affecting the Minority Student’s Law School Experience, in The African American Law School Survival Guide: Information, Advice and Strategies to Prepare You for the Challenges of the Law School Experience (Evangeline M. Mitchell ed., Hope's Promise Publishing, 2006)Clicking on the button will copy the full recommended citation.
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Darryl Wilson, ACLI Case Notes, 1 American and Caribbean Law News 5 (2006)Clicking on the button will copy the full recommended citation.
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Darryl Wilson, “Let Them Do Drugs,” A Commentary on Random Efforts at Shot Blocking in the Sports Drug Game, 8 Fla. Coastal L. Rev. 53 (2006)Clicking on the button will copy the full recommended citation.
Performance enhancing supplements are a part of most people's everyday life whether it be coffee, cigarettes, Coke, or something "good for you" in a non-pharmaceutical sense of the term. No where is performance enhancement more sought after than in competitive athletics. This article reviews the historical background of performance enhancements and steroid use in sports. It then analyzes the unnecessarily unwieldy assortment of administrative bodies charged with testing, regulation, and disciplining policy offenders. A look at domestic legislative responses follows, along with a review of the disparate court and administrative decisions rendered in this area from both domestic and international bodies. Next, this article will look at some of the practical implications of these decisions to determine if the goal of ridding sports of these enhancements is truly desirable, remotely realistic and reasonably furthered by the actions of the decisions rendered. While some tangible suggestions on how the system can be reformed are offered, they also consider the prospects of simply changing the rewards available for those found to use unauthorized drugs instead of the ineffective approach of instituting after the fact bans and making examples of certain athletes. Without a concerted effort by more unified domestic and international bodies in conjunction with actions by existing or new governmental authorities there really is no hope for stopping illicit drug usage.
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Darryl Wilson, Waltzing to R.A.P., 39 Creighton L. Rev. 129 (2005)Clicking on the button will copy the full recommended citation.
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Darryl Wilson, Elder Law Issues in the Basic Real Property Course, 30 Stetson L. Rev. 353 (2001)Clicking on the button will copy the full recommended citation.
The proverbial "graying of America" has given rise to a constant need to re-evaluate many core areas of substantive law to determine the degree to which they are intertwined with legal issues that are of great concern to senior citizens. This article focuses on the aspects of the basic real property course that intersect with the substantive area known as "Elder Law". Elder law is a diverse field that has grown geometrically in recent years as modern medicine continues to extend our life expectancy. Because we are all living longer elder law issues extend beyond mere concerns of property descent and distribution. While it is certainly true that any of us could pass away at any given moment, the elderly understandably think about death more often than others and are therefore more concerned about their property passing to the parties they choose. But as the elderly continue to press forward they are also anxious about their quality of life and the legal implications of having others assist in the daily legal issues surrounding acquisition, maintenance and transfers of property while they still have a strong body and mind.
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Darryl Wilson, Home Field Disadvantage: The Negative Impact of Allowing Home Schoolers to Participate in Mainstream Sports, 3 Virginia Journal of Sports and the Law 1 (2001)Clicking on the button will copy the full recommended citation.
Everyone's heard of the proverbial home field advantage in sports whereby the friendly confines of one's own humble abode provides a competitive edge over the inherent stress of being a member of the visiting team in a hostile environment. This article does not aim to analyze the extent to which the psychological perceptions of the home-field advantage manifest themselves into a positive reality. Instead the issues surrounding a more recent phenomenon are explored wherein progressively larger numbers of students are leaving the traditional school setting in favor of being taught at home. The home-schooler, for whatever reason, has become disassociated from the normal group-teaching mainstream environment offered by the more standard, yet varied educational options and instead receives individualized-educational attention literally within the confines of his or her own dwelling. Despite making the choice to avoid the mainstream scholastically, the home-schoolers argue that they are entitled to take advantage of the extracurricular offerings of the mainstream, including band and other arts programs as well as the right to be a member of the best sports teams whether public, private or parochial.
This article initially reviews the evolution of the home-school movement and the quest of the home-school student to participate in sports. The history is followed by an analysis of the arguments for and against allowing participation, along with administrative and legislative responses. The article then assesses whether more subtle and insidious aspects of student-athlete exploitation are the motivating forces behind the home-schoolers desires or whether these exploitative forces have yet to be considered or whether the mere fact that such exploitation is possible is enough to support a ban on the home-schooler becoming the ultimate athletic free agent of secondary education.
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Darryl Wilson, ‘Black’ Law Schools Face Challenges of a New Day, 18 Black Issues in Higher Education 104 (2001)Clicking on the button will copy the full recommended citation.
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Darryl Wilson, Bailment, in Magill's Legal Guide (Frank N. Magill et al. eds., Salem Press, 1999)Clicking on the button will copy the full recommended citation.
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Darryl Wilson, Covenants Not to Compete, in Magill's Legal Guide (Frank N. Magill et al. eds., Salem Press, 1999)Clicking on the button will copy the full recommended citation.