
The fair definition, fair definition for fair dinkums
The fair definitions for the 2018 and 2019 fairs were announced by the Association of Football Coaches and the European Football Federation last week.
The UEFA Fair definition, which was published in April 2018, is the current version of the law which sets out how much an event is allowed to spend on advertising and sponsorship for the competition.
The fair definition also sets out the maximum amount an event can spend on promotional material, including posters, placards and merchandise.
However, it doesn’t mention that this is how the UEFA fair definition is applied in the case of the 2019 World Cup in Russia.
Instead, it specifies the maximum amounts allowed for advertising and promotional materials.
The European Football Association said it wanted to clarify this, saying that the 2018 definition had been “laid out in a way that would allow us to make clear what was allowed”.
It said this was needed to make sure that there were no misunderstandings.
The 2018 and the 2019 fair definitions have the same legal structure, but are slightly different.
The European Fair definition allows the amount of advertising and merchandising an event could spend on the game to be as high as the maximum allowed by the Fair Competition Act.
However the 2019 definition says the maximum is to be set by a collective agreement between all 28 European football associations.
This means that in 2018, the UEFA Fair Fair definition had a maximum of €150,000 for advertising.
The 2019 Fair definition will now only allow an amount of €40,000 in marketing and promotional material for each game.
However UEFA’s Chief Executive, Gianni Infantino, has previously said that the 2019 version of fair definition should be “more inclusive” and that it should also allow the amount spent on marketing and promotion materials to be a maximum amount of more than €40 million.