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Sports Law in Asia Pacific: Key Issues & Considerations

By By Jonathan Cheong, Consultant, Bagus Enrico & Partners, 13 Jun 2025

The Asia Pacific region has experienced a noticeable increase in commercial sports teams recruiting athletes from outside their home countries. For instance, basketball, volleyball and football players in the Philippines are increasingly sought after by Hong Kong, South Korea, and Japan clubs. Similarly, the recruitment of foreign student-athletes, primarily in basketball, volleyball, and football, is rising at the country’s universities and colleges. 

Yet, sports law remains largely unregulated in the Philippines and many other jurisdictions. The absence of clear legal frameworks often creates ambiguity regarding an athlete’s rights and obligations, and many are unaware of their legal protections and responsibilities.

This article explores the key issues and considerations affecting sports law in the Asia-Pacific region.

Contractual Protection

Too often, athletes sign contracts without fully understanding the long-term implications, leading to disputes over payments, sponsorship obligations, image rights, or contract termination terms.

Furthermore, the internationalization of sports has significantly impacted contractual agreements. Contracts involving foreign athletes often raise complex legal issues, such as jurisdictional considerations, applicable law, and cross-border enforcement.

Additional complications arise with young athletes, requiring parental involvement or representation, and raising concerns about consent, capacity, and enforceability.

As a result, athletes and stakeholders, including sports clubs and organizations, national bodies, sponsors, broadcasters, agents, and data providers, are increasingly engaging legal counsel and representation for contract negotiation, regulatory compliance, dispute resolution, and sponsorship agreements.

Athlete & Sponsorship Agreements

Athlete and sponsor agreements and media rights are essential elements of the commercial framework surrounding modern sports. Today’s athletes increasingly act as social media influencers, endorsing consumer products like cosmetics, food, and apparel. 

Athlete agreements typically include compensation, performance KPIs, image rights, media obligations, off-field conduct, injuries, and digital presence. Resembling talent agreements commonly found in entertainment, they tend to be heavily one-sided and complex, particularly when young or inexperienced athletes are involved, placing disproportionate control in the hands of sponsors, teams, or agents.

Sponsorship agreements usually include exclusivity clauses, activation rights, morality clauses triggered by athlete misconduct or reputational risks, and distinctions between team and personal sponsors.

In the Philippines, such arrangements remain primarily informal and are often carried out without written contracts. This lack of formal documentation exposes athletes to considerable legal and financial risks, including potential exploitation, misappropriation of likeness, and non-payment of sponsorship fees.

Media & IP Rights

As athletes continue to commercialize their personal brands, particularly through digital platforms, questions regarding the ownership and control of their name, image, likeness, and other Intellectual Property (IP) assets will necessitate careful legal consideration and clear contractual terms.

Events and competitions are increasingly monetizing sports data, highlights, and digital content, calling for sharper legal focus on trademark registration, licensing, and enforcement, especially regarding digital piracy, counterfeit merchandise, and unauthorized use of content online. 

Media rights involve various legal considerations, including territorial and platform exclusivity, live and non-live content rights, digital distribution protocols, and revenue-sharing arrangements between leagues and athletes. Key concerns include

  • Who owns athlete-generated content on social media?
  • How is it monetized?
  • What happens when it’s shared or sponsored independently of the league or club?

Dispute Resolution

Dispute resolution in sports is increasingly managed through arbitration and mediation. Institutions like the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) are highly effective in preserving the integrity of sports by confidentially and efficiently resolving cross-border disputes and maintaining procedural fairness across jurisdictions.

Notable examples include doping appeals, disputes over athlete eligibility in international tournaments, and conflicts arising from broadcasting and sponsorship agreements.

Given the industry’s accelerating commercialization and globalization, regulatory bodies and legal counsel must stay vigilant in enforcing anti-corruption standards. This includes implementing whistleblower mechanisms, investigating match-fixing allegations, and adhering to codes of conduct set forth by international federations and national governing bodies.

Anti-Doping Laws

The global framework for anti-doping laws and compliance is primarily governed by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), which outlines the World Anti-Doping Code, a unified set of standards designed to promote fairness, integrity, and health in sports. Member countries and sporting bodies are required to implement these standards through domestic legislation and regulatory policies.

The Indonesia Anti-Doping Organization (IADO) rebranded in 2022 to function as a professional and independent body, crucial in lifting WADA’s previous non-compliance sanctions on the country. The National Sports Committee of Indonesia (KONI) has partnered with IADO to promote anti-doping education and campaigns at all sports levels, from national to local. 

Understanding IADO’s regulations and WADA’s standards is essential for ensuring athletes and support personnel are educated about anti-doping rules and compliant with testing procedures. Compliance also helps uphold integrity in sports.

A Specialized Law Partner You Can Trust

As the sports industry expands and professionalizes globally, the need for robust, adaptable, and forward-looking strategies becomes even more urgent. Whether addressing governance, commercial rights, athlete protection, or emerging digital challenges, experienced legal professionals are critical for shaping a transparent, fair, and sustainable sporting environment.

Globalaw’s Sports Law Taskforce is a dedicated advisory group of 22 member firms and over 30 attorneys in jurisdictions around the world. Through specialized legal counsel and representation that addresses multifaceted issues and cross-border needs, we help our clients develop and implement a legal framework that protects and empowers their interests for today and tomorrow.

Download the Globalaw Sports Law Taskforce brochure or contact me for more information about our capabilities.

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Insights
14 Mar 2026

Ireland: A Premier Legal Hub for Global Business

Ireland has established itself as one of the world’s most attractive jurisdictions for companies seeking legal certainty, efficiency, and internationally recognised dispute resolution mechanisms. Its combination of a common law foundation, EU membership, specialist courts, and growing technological capability makes it a compelling choice for international business.

A Stable, Predictable Common Law System

Ireland’s common law framework provides reliability through the doctrine of precedent, giving businesses clarity and reducing legal ambiguity. As an English-speaking jurisdiction, Ireland also offers seamless communication and a familiar legal environment for global companies.

An EU Member with Strong Cross-Border Enforceability

As part of the European Union, Ireland benefits from the supremacy of EU law and automatic EU-wide recognition of Irish judgments, with limited exceptions. The country is also a party to key international agreements, including the Lugano and Hague Conventions, thereby enhancing enforceability beyond the EU.

Efficient Courts and Cost-Competitive Litigation

Ireland offers a competitive cost regime compared with jurisdictions such as the UK and the US. The “costs follow the event” principle allows successful parties to recover fees, helping manage financial exposure.

The court structure supports efficient dispute resolution, with the High Court handling major commercial matters and the Circuit and District Courts managing lower-value disputes.

A Commercial Court Built for Speed and Complexity

Ireland’s Commercial Court is highly regarded for its expertise, strict case management, and fast-track procedures. Complex and high-value business disputes are fast-tracked, and more than 60% of cases conclude within a year. Specialist lists—such as Intellectual Property & Technology and Planning & Environment—ensure cases receive expert judicial attention.

A Modern, Streamlined Appeals Process

The Court of Appeal usually hears appeals within 3–5 months, supported by weekly case management sessions held in person and remotely. The Supreme Court focuses on cases of major public importance, processing applications quickly and listing accepted appeals without delay.

A Global Centre for Arbitration and Mediation

Ireland is a leading destination for alternative dispute resolution.

• Arbitration benefits from confidentiality, finality, the UNCITRAL Model Law, and Ireland’s status as a New York Convention signatory.

• Mediation enjoys success rates of 80% and statutory support via the Mediation Act 2017. Courts can also encourage mediation even after litigation begins.

Other ADR mechanisms, such as conciliation and adjudication, offer additional flexibility.

Innovation Driven Courts and Industry Expertise

Ireland is investing heavily in digital transformation. Legal professionals and judges possess deep expertise in sectors such as pharmaceuticals, life sciences, financial services, and technology—reflecting Ireland’s role as a global business hub.

A Supportive Restructuring Environment

Ireland’s insolvency and restructuring framework is creditor-friendly and flexible, with processes such as Examinership and the Small Company Administrative Rescue Process (SCARP) helping businesses navigate financial difficulty efficiently.

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For more information, contact:

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Eamon Harrington

Partner & Head of CKT’s Healthcare and Litigation Departments

www.ckt.ie

news
24 Feb 2026

Member Spotlight: JJ Roca & Asociados, Dominican Republic

A Strategic Full-Service Firm with Regional & International Reach

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Founded in 1998 by Jaime Roca, JJ Roca & Asociados (ROCA) has evolved into one of the Dominican Republic’s leading full-service law firms, recognized for handling complex, high-value matters for both local enterprises and multinational corporations.

Over more than two decades, the firm has grown deliberately and strategically, building a multidisciplinary structure capable of addressing corporate, regulatory, transactional, dispute resolution, and intellectual property matters with equal depth. While mid-sized by market standards, ROCA operates with the sophistication, coordination, and technical rigor expected by international clients operating across multiple jurisdictions.

Today, the firm is trusted by global companies to navigate not only Dominican law, but to act as regional counsel navigating the broader Caribbean and Central American legal landscape.

Purpose Shapes Every Client Experience

ROCA’s culture reflects a firm where excellence is the standard, service is personal, and every client relationship is treated as a long-term partnership.

“Culture is both our identity and our strategy,” said Partner Sharin Pablo de Roca. “We define it as a commitment to excellence, lived through service, collaboration, and genuine human warmth, and as a philosophy that guides every aspect of the client experience.”

ROCA pairs technical expertise with a proactive, solutions-oriented mindset, where clients can expect clarity, responsiveness, and legal work of the highest quality, delivered by a team that understands their business and anticipates their needs.

The firm’s attorneys and staff approach each matter with diligence, integrity, and a deep sense of responsibility to clients’ goals. Responsiveness, precision, and thoughtful guidance are part of their daily discipline.

Sharin says the firm believes that exceptional client service is strengthened by how teams work internally. By fostering an environment where professionals collaborate effectively, support one another, and lead with purpose, the firm ensures that its clients receive not only strong legal representation but also a consistent, high-quality experience across all touchpoints.

A Multidisciplinary Platform Built for Complex Work

ROCA’s practice is anchored in Corporate, Litigation, and Intellectual Property, but its capabilities extend well beyond these pillars. The firm regularly advises on mergers and acquisitions, restructuring and insolvency, banking and finance, capital markets, tax, real estate, administrative and regulatory matters, competition, data protection, foreign investment, free-zone operations, immigration, energy and environmental matters, and sector-specific regulatory frameworks.

This breadth allows the firm to assemble integrated teams tailored to each matter, ensuring that clients receive coordinated advice aligned with their commercial and operational objectives.

Rather than operating in silos, ROCA’s structure enables seamless collaboration across disciplines — a critical advantage when handling cross-border transactions, regulatory strategy, or high-stakes disputes.

Trusted by Multinational and Institutional Clients

ROCA’s client portfolio reflects the confidence placed in the firm by sophisticated international companies and financial institutions.

The firm serves as regional counsel to The Coca-Cola Company and its affiliates for the management, prosecution and enforcement of their trademark portfolio across all 26 Caribbean jurisdictions, and routinely conducts regional due diligence for major marketing launches.

ROCA acts as multiregional counsel to Western Digital Technologies, Inc., managing trademark portfolios in the Dominican Republic and throughout Central America and the Caribbean, including assignments tied to global corporate reorganization strategies.

The firm acts as local counsel to Les Laboratoires Servier SAS and its subsidiary Biofarma, handling complex opposition and cancellation proceedings and expanding coordinated IP strategies beyond the Dominican Republic.

In the financial sector, ROCA represents Scotiabank in significant litigation matters, and has advised institutional investors in high-value acquisitions and restructurings.

In the restructuring space, the firm acted as local counsel to the fund led by Amzak Capital Management in the acquisition and merger of Tricom, Telecable Nacional, and affiliated companies — the first and largest restructuring of a Dominican company under Chapter 11 of the New York Bankruptcy Code.

In dispute resolution, ROCA represented Swatch AG of The Swatch Group in coordinated global trademark litigation relating to the “IWATCH” mark, aligning Dominican strategy with actions in multiple jurisdictions worldwide.

These matters reflect not only technical capability, but also the trust placed in the firm to manage sensitive, high-stakes, and cross-border work.

ROCA’s capabilities in handling complex, cross-border matters with consistency and sophistication are reflected in its recognition by Chambers, The Legal 500, IFLR, WTR, IP Stars and other leading legal directories.

Globalaw Catalyzes International Reach

Since joining Globalaw three years ago, ROCA has actively contributed to the network’s collaborative initiatives. Sharin Pablo de Roca leads the Globalaw IP Initiative, facilitating coordination among IP practitioners worldwide and strengthening cross-border relationships within the alliance. She also serves on Globalaw’s Membership Committee for the Latin American and Caribbean region.

The firm regularly collaborates with fellow Globalaw members on referrals involving corporate structuring, regulatory compliance, IP protection and strategy, franchise regulation, data protection, and contractual risk management.

As a recent example, ROCA recently advised a well-known international retail chain, introduced through the Globalaw network, on franchise regulatory requirements and the review of its franchise agreement for local compliance. Work on the corresponding trademark license agreement is underway.

“Globalaw membership is central to our ability to deliver seamless cross-border support. The collaboration, knowledge-sharing and referrals generated through the network enhance our international reach, deepen our practice capabilities, and allow us to offer clients truly global solutions with local insight,” Sharin said.

For more information, visit www.jjrocalaw.com.

news
22 Feb 2026

Chambers Guide Ranks Globalaw as a Band 1 Leading Law Firm Network for 6th Year

Globalaw, a leading network of approximately 80 independent law firms in over 60 countries, is pleased to announce it has once again been ranked as a Band 1 Leading Law Firm Network in the Chambers Global Guide for 2026. This is Globalaw’s sixth consecutive recognition. The network has also been ranked as a Leading Regional Law Firm Network in the Asia-Pacific region for the ninth year.

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Chambers and Partners is widely regarded as the world’s leading independent legal ranking and research organisation. Rankings are based on in-depth research and interviews with law firms, lawyers and their clients in more than 200 jurisdictions worldwide.

“Globalaw is a strategically assembled network, defined by the high-quality and integrated approach of our member firms,” said Globalaw President Peter J. Brown, Partner at Edwards, Kenny & Bray LLP in Canada. “We are proud to receive international recognition from Chambers and Partners for the network’s capacity to collaborate across jurisdictions and deliver exceptional depth and breadth of legal expertise in a comprehensive range of industries and practice areas.”

About Globalaw

Founded in 1994, Globalaw is a global band one Chambers-ranked leading network of approximately 80 independent law firms and 4,000 lawyers in over 60 countries. Our mission is to foster seamless legal collaboration among member firms and to help them deliver high-quality, cost-effective solutions to their clients worldwide. We take pride in our commitment to excellence, global reach, and innovative approach to legal services. Visit www.globalaw.net to learn more.

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02 Feb 2026

Belgium Firm MVVP Joins Globalaw

Globalaw is pleased to announce that MVVP has joined the network!

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Founded in 1995 by a group of passionate lawyers from diverse backgrounds who shared a vision of building a comprehensive, forward-thinking legal practice, MVVP has established itself as an independent, full-service law firm based in Brussels, Belgium. MVVP covers all key areas of business law, including corporate, employment, commercial, GDPR compliance, intellectual property and IT, media, real estate, and tax. Over the years, the firm's growth has been driven by strong partnerships and the integration of new talent, both internally and externally.

MVVP understands the nuances of global legal and business cultures. Operating in five languages (English, French, Dutch, German, Spanish and Italian), 50% of their work involves international clients or subsidiaries of foreign groups. They serve startups, SMEs, and multinationals across sectors such as advertising, media, technology, pharmaceuticals, and retail. The firm's work is evenly split between legal advisory (negotiations, contracts, training, regulatory compliance) and litigation (dispute resolution, arbitration, mediation), both in Belgium and at the European level. MVVP combines a personal approach, multidisciplinary expertise, and an international outlook to deliver tailored legal solutions that align with your needs and ambitions.

The firm's expertise is recognized by leading legal directories, including Chambers and The Legal 500. For more information, visit www.mvvp.be.