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The Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights handed down its landmark judgment in Semenya v. Switzerland on 10 July 2025, finding that Switzerland had breached the applicant’s Convention rights in connection with a Court of Arbitration for Sport award. For every actor operating at the intersection of CAS, ECtHR and sports law in Switzerland, athletes, national federations, clubs, selection committees and their counsel, the ruling reshapes the litigation and compliance landscape heading into 2026.
This practitioner guide sets out the concrete steps Swiss stakeholders must take now: how to challenge a CAS award, how to defend one, and how to restructure internal governance to withstand human-rights scrutiny under Article 6 and Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
The Semenya Grand Chamber decision confirmed that Switzerland bears responsibility under the Convention for the procedural and substantive human-rights compliance of CAS awards rendered on Swiss soil. The ruling does not give the ECtHR the power to annul or rewrite a CAS award directly, but it imposes a clear obligation on the Swiss legal system, and therefore on the Swiss Federal Supreme Court, to provide effective scrutiny of CAS awards that engage fundamental rights.
For athletes, this creates a new avenue of pressure: after exhausting domestic remedies (including the Swiss Federal Supreme Court appeal under Article 190 of the Swiss Private International Law Act, known as PILA), a successful ECtHR application can result in declaratory relief, just satisfaction, and systemic pressure on Switzerland to widen its review of CAS awards. For federations and clubs, the decision means that eligibility rules, disciplinary procedures and arbitration clauses must now demonstrably satisfy Convention standards, or risk successful challenges.
Industry observers expect a measurable increase in human-rights-based challenges to CAS awards and in compliance overhauls by Swiss-based international federations throughout the remainder of 2026. The following five-point checklist captures the highest-priority actions.
| Priority | Action | Who |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Audit all arbitration clauses and disciplinary regulations for Article 6 and Article 8 compliance (hearing rights, reasons, proportionality). | Federations, clubs |
| 2 | In every pending CAS proceeding, expressly preserve human-rights arguments on the record (Article 6 fair-hearing, Article 8 private-life, Article 14 discrimination). | Athletes’ counsel |
| 3 | Review the 30-day deadline for filing an appeal to the Swiss Federal Supreme Court after notification of a CAS award and calendar it immediately upon receipt. | All counsel |
| 4 | Prepare proportionality evidence, scientific, medical and comparative, in advance of any eligibility or disciplinary decision that may reach CAS. | Federations, athletes |
| 5 | Monitor Swiss Federal Supreme Court case law from 2025–2026 for evolving public-policy grounds and widened review standards. | All counsel |
The Grand Chamber judgment in Semenya v. Switzerland (Application No. 10934/21, 10 July 2025) addressed whether Switzerland had violated the European Convention on Human Rights by failing to provide adequate judicial review of a CAS award that upheld World Athletics’ Differences of Sex Development (DSD) regulations. The applicant argued that the CAS proceedings and subsequent Swiss Federal Supreme Court review failed to protect her rights under Article 8 (right to respect for private life) and Article 14 (prohibition of discrimination), read together with Article 6 (right to a fair trial).
The Grand Chamber held that Switzerland had violated Article 8, taken together with Article 14, by not ensuring that CAS or the Swiss Federal Supreme Court carried out a sufficiently thorough proportionality analysis of the eligibility regulations as applied to the athlete. The Court emphasised that where fundamental rights are at stake in sports arbitration, the reviewing court, here the Swiss Federal Supreme Court, must exercise more than minimal, formalistic scrutiny.
The ECtHR did not rule that CAS lacks jurisdiction over sports disputes, nor did it declare the CAS system incompatible with the Convention as a whole. It did not order Switzerland to reopen or set aside the specific CAS award. The decision is not a blanket prohibition on sex-differentiated eligibility rules; rather, it requires that such rules be subjected to genuine, evidence-based proportionality assessment at every level of review. Athletes and counsel should therefore avoid over-reading the judgment as a guarantee of success in future challenges, the Court’s reasoning is fact-specific and centred on the adequacy of review, not the merits of the underlying regulation.
The relationship between CAS jurisdiction and human rights has been contested across multiple ECtHR judgments. To challenge a CAS award in Switzerland, or to defend one, counsel must understand how the Strasbourg jurisprudence has evolved and what it now requires of CAS panels and Swiss reviewing courts.
In Mutu and Pechstein v. Switzerland (Applications Nos. 40575/10 and 67474/10, 2 October 2018), the Grand Chamber held that CAS constitutes a “tribunal” within the meaning of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention when athletes have no realistic alternative but to accept its jurisdiction. The Court examined CAS’s institutional independence, procedural safeguards and the nature of the disputes submitted to it. This precedent was reinforced in Ali Riza and Others v. Turkey (2020), where the Court applied Article 6 to a national sports arbitration body and found structural independence deficiencies.
After Semenya, the position is clear: when an athlete is compelled to submit to CAS arbitration as a condition of competing, CAS is bound by the fair-trial guarantees of Article 6. This includes the right to a public hearing (unless waived), the right to a reasoned decision, and the requirement of an independent and impartial tribunal. Counsel acting for athletes should explicitly invoke Article 6 in CAS submissions and request a public hearing where the case involves fundamental-rights issues.
A party that wishes to challenge CAS jurisdiction, or to argue that a particular dispute is non-arbitrable because it engages inalienable human rights, must raise that objection at the earliest procedural stage. Under the CAS Code of Sports-related Arbitration, jurisdictional objections not raised in the answer or the first written submission may be deemed waived. Preservation is essential: any argument that CAS lacks competence, or that the arbitration clause is vitiated by the absence of genuine consent, must be pleaded expressly and carried through every subsequent submission.
The following comparison table summarises the remedies available, the forum for each, and their practical effect for Swiss practitioners in CAS, ECtHR and sports arbitration in Switzerland.
| Remedy | Available Forum | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Set aside or annul award | Swiss Federal Supreme Court (annulment under Art. 190 PILA) | Award is annulled and matter may be remitted for fresh proceedings; grounds are narrow (jurisdiction, composition, ultra petita, procedural fairness, public policy). |
| Compensation (just satisfaction) | ECtHR (after exhausting domestic remedies) | Monetary compensation and declaratory relief; does not directly reopen or annul the CAS award, but creates systemic compliance pressure on Switzerland. |
| Declaration of human-rights breach | ECtHR | Declaratory relief with systemic impact; Switzerland must draw consequences in its domestic legal order, which may include legislative or jurisprudential change. |
For athletes and other parties seeking to challenge a CAS award, the primary domestic route is an appeal to the Swiss Federal Supreme Court under Article 190 PILA. This section provides the procedural roadmap, timelines and tactical advice that counsel need for an effective challenge.
Article 190(2) PILA provides an exhaustive list of grounds on which an international arbitral award, including a CAS award, may be challenged before the Swiss Federal Supreme Court:
The following procedural timeline governs an appeal against a CAS award before the Swiss Federal Supreme Court:
| Step | Deadline / Timing | Key Action |
|---|---|---|
| Notification of award | Day 0 | Receive and date-stamp the CAS award; immediately calendar the 30-day appeal deadline. |
| File appeal (recours en matière civile) | 30 days from notification | Submit the appeal brief to the Swiss Federal Supreme Court specifying the Art. 190(2) ground(s). This deadline is non-extendable. |
| Request for suspensive effect | With the appeal or promptly thereafter | Request a stay of enforcement if interim relief is needed (e.g., eligibility for upcoming competition). |
| Exchange of written submissions | Set by the Court | Respondent’s answer; possible second round. Include all human-rights arguments and evidence. |
| Judgment | Typically 6–12 months | Court issues a reasoned judgment; if the award is annulled, matter is remitted to CAS or to a newly constituted panel. |
Counsel who anticipate a Swiss Federal Supreme Court challenge must lay the procedural groundwork during the CAS hearing itself. Failure to preserve arguments at the CAS stage can result in waiver or preclusion before the Federal Supreme Court.
Beyond the standard appellate pathway, counsel should consider several tactical tools. CAS Rule 37 allows parties to request provisional measures (e.g., interim eligibility pending resolution). Amicus curiae briefs, while not traditional in CAS proceedings, are increasingly accepted in cases raising systemic or human-rights issues, and their submission signals the broader significance of the dispute. Finally, a formal request for a public hearing, if refused, creates a documented procedural objection that strengthens an Article 6 argument before the Swiss Federal Supreme Court or the ECtHR.
Federations and international governing bodies that have obtained a favourable CAS award must now prepare for heightened scrutiny. The Semenya judgment raises the evidentiary and procedural bar for defending eligibility rules, disciplinary sanctions and other regulatory measures that engage fundamental rights.
The likely practical effect of Semenya is that reviewing courts will scrutinise not only the content of a federation’s rule but the process by which it was adopted. Federations should maintain a decision log that records: the evidence considered, the stakeholder consultations undertaken (including with affected athletes), the alternatives evaluated and rejected, and the reasons for the final decision. This documentation should be contemporaneous, not prepared after a challenge is filed, and should be disclosed to the CAS panel as part of the evidentiary record.
The Swiss Federal Supreme Court (Bundesgericht / Tribunal fédéral) has historically applied a narrow standard of review to CAS awards under Article 190 PILA. In practice, annulment has been granted rarely, and the Court has repeatedly emphasised that it does not act as a court of appeal on the merits. However, the Semenya judgment is expected to shift this posture in cases engaging fundamental rights.
Based on established Swiss Federal Supreme Court jurisprudence, the most successful grounds for annulment of CAS awards have been:
Sports governance compliance in Switzerland now requires active alignment with Convention standards. The following entity-specific checklist identifies the changes that federations, clubs and selection committees should implement by September 2026 to reduce litigation risk and demonstrate good-faith compliance with the principles established in Semenya.
| Entity | Must-Change by September 2026 | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| National federations | Review and amend all eligibility and disciplinary regulations to include explicit proportionality requirements; ensure a written reasons obligation; provide for an independent appeal mechanism before any referral to CAS. | Grand Chamber held that the absence of effective proportionality review violates Articles 8 and 14. |
| Clubs and teams | Update internal bylaws to guarantee written notice, the right to be heard, and the right to a reasoned decision in any disciplinary or selection dispute; review arbitration clauses for genuine-consent language. | Article 6 requirements apply where an athlete has no realistic alternative to CAS; club-level procedures must mirror these protections. |
| Selection committees | Adopt and publish transparent selection criteria in advance of each competition cycle; document the basis for each selection decision; provide a written reasons obligation and an internal appeal route. | Protects against challenges based on procedural fairness and discrimination, both heightened post-Semenya. |
Note: The following templates are schematic and illustrative only. They do not constitute legal advice. Parties should instruct qualified counsel to adapt them to the facts of each case.
Template A, Preservation Language for CAS Submissions
“The Respondent/Claimant hereby expressly preserves all arguments under Articles 6, 8 and 14 of the European Convention on Human Rights, as applicable to these proceedings by virtue of the Grand Chamber’s judgment in Semenya v. Switzerland (Application No. 10934/21, 10 July 2025). The party requests that the Panel apply a full proportionality analysis to the impugned regulation and provide detailed reasons for its findings. The party further requests a public hearing in accordance with Article 6 § 1 ECHR. In the event that any of these requests are denied, the party notes the denial on the record for purposes of any subsequent appeal.”
Template B, Sample Ground for Swiss Federal Supreme Court Challenge (Schematic)
“The award is incompatible with Swiss public policy (Art. 190(2)(e) PILA) in that it applies [the impugned regulation] without conducting the proportionality analysis required by Articles 8 and 14 ECHR, as mandated by the Grand Chamber in Semenya v. Switzerland. The CAS Panel failed to assess whether the restriction on the athlete’s rights pursues a legitimate aim, is necessary in a democratic society, and is proportionate to that aim. This failure renders the award incompatible with the fundamental values of the Swiss legal order.”
Template C, Federation Clause Language to Reduce Risk
“Any eligibility or disciplinary decision taken under these regulations shall be accompanied by written reasons, shall be communicated to the affected athlete within [X] days, and shall be subject to appeal before [an independent internal body] prior to referral to the Court of Arbitration for Sport. In reaching any decision, the decision-maker shall apply a proportionality analysis, having regard to the athlete’s fundamental rights including the right to respect for private life and the prohibition of discrimination.”
The Semenya Grand Chamber judgment has redrawn the boundaries of CAS, ECtHR and sports arbitration practice in Switzerland. Athletes now have stronger tools to demand proportionality review; federations face higher procedural and evidentiary standards; and Swiss counsel must master a dual-track litigation strategy that spans Lausanne and Strasbourg. The steps in this guide, from preservation language in CAS submissions to compliance overhauls for federations, are designed to be actionable immediately. For athletes, federations and counsel navigating this new landscape, expert guidance from a qualified sports law specialist is essential. Practitioners across Switzerland can find experienced Swiss sports lawyers through the Global Law Experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Lucien W. Valloni at VALLONI ATTORNEYS AT LAW, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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