Call Issued for Bybee Scholarships

The International Association of Gaming Advisors has invited law students to submit research papers in the contest for two Shannon Bybee Scholarship awards.

The International Association of Gaming Advisors (IAGA) has issued its annual call for research papers in the contest for 2017 Shannon Bybee Scholarship Awards.

IAGA is seeking law student research papers that enhance the understanding of gaming law or recommend a beneficial change in gaming law. The association will award prizes of $2,500 for each of the two best research papers written by J.D. students of accredited or international equivalent law schools as part of their class work during the 2016-2017 school year. The awards will be announced during the Global Gaming Expo in Las Vegas, October 3-5, 2017.

The awards honor the memory of Shannon Bybee, one of IAGA’s founders, who had a distinguished career as a gaming attorney, Nevada regulator, industry executive and pioneer in the field of education in casino operations and gaming law. Inducted into the American Gaming Association’s Hall of Fame in 2002 because of his significant contributions to responsible gaming, Bybee also played an important role in the development of problem gambling regulations and advocacy.

To be eligible for the 2017 Shannon Bybee Scholarship Award, submitted papers must:

• Be prepared as part of a J.D. student’s class work at an accredited or international equivalent law school during the 2016-17 school year;

• Be submitted no later than 5 p.m. PST on July 15, 2017 to Jennifer Roberts, 2017 Shannon Bybee Scholarship Award Committee Co-Chair, by mail to her attention at the UNLV International Center for Gaming Regulation, 4505 S. Maryland Parkway, Box 456041, Las Vegas, Nevada 89154-6041 or by email at jennifer.roberts@unlv.edu;

• Be accompanied by written confirmation from a law school instructor that the paper was written under the direction of that instructor;

• At the time of submission, not have been published or selected for publication in any academic, legal, or gaming industry journal or periodical;

• Be accompanied by a written and signed confirmation that if the paper is selected for the 2017 Shannon Bybee Scholarship Award, IAGA may publish the paper in an IAGA-sponsored publication and post the paper online via the official IAGA web site; and,

• Be written on a topic that either enhances the understanding of gaming law or recommends a beneficial change in gaming law.

Submitted papers may be of any length, but it is recommended they be between 3,000 and 5,000 words, exclusive of footnoting. The criteria for evaluation of the papers are:

• Importance to the field of gaming, to gaming regulators and practitioners, and to the study of gaming law;

• Quality of presentation, including clarity, completeness, logic, economy, precision, emphasis, grammar, usage, punctuation and flow; and,

• Depth and breadth of research and analysis as reflected in text and footnotes.

The director of the 2017 Shannon Bybee Scholarship Award is Peter Bernhard, former chairman of the Nevada Gaming Commission. Co-chairs of the Shannon Bybee Scholarship Committee are Tom Auriemma, gaming industry consultant and adjunct faculty at Rutgers Law School, Newark; and Jennifer Roberts, associate director of the International Center for Gaming Regulation at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and adjunct professor of gaming law at both UNLV William S. Boyd School of Law and University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law. They are joined by committee members Ken Oettle, senior counsel at Sills Cummis & Gross in New Jersey, and Maren Parry, gaming attorney with Ballard Spahr in Las Vegas.

For additional information on the 2017 Shannon Bybee Scholarship Award call for entries, contact Jennifer Roberts at 702-895-2653 or Jennifer.roberts@unlv.edu.