The 2018 PyeongChang Olympic Games have been successfully held, but there are many issues in the Korean sports industry, regardless of the success of the international competition. Among them, the human rights issue of sports people is still stale even after time. This is a problem in the sports world of Korea, but there is also a lack of maintenance of laws and systems. Infringement on the right to sports is a general human rights violation, but problem solving is not easy because it occurs in a specific field of sports. Sports organizations impose human rights education on sports leaders and athletes every time a sports human rights violation occurs, but it is not a problem to be solved by human rights education alone. Today, sports need not mention importance as an important part of human life. Korea does not provide sports rights in the Constitution. Even if the Constitution does not directly define the right to sports, a review of the content of sports can be found in the various provisions of the Constitution. In addition, laws on sports can also be the legal basis for guaranteeing sports as a right. The development of the sport was due to the national promotion policy, but due to the nature of the sport that gives the individual a necessary life. Sports are not only possible for individual physical activities, but also for group activities. Sports has already extended its foundation over the years. Particularly, the Olympic Games, which were born in the late 19th century and occupy a large part of sports to this day, are now more meaningful as an event in which human culture is accumulated in sports as a target of competition among sports nations. The European Union as well as the United Nations have seen sports rights as human rights and have worked to ensure them. In the 1970s, the international community declared sports rights human rights. This Declaration of Human Rights was gradually embodied in the International Sports Charter or the European Sports Charter. The European Union recognizes the right to sports as a fundamental right through the Constitution. In addition, a significant number of countries in the European Union guarantee sports rights by defining the sport as a right or as a task or obligation of the state. Despite these global trends, Korea has no constitutional provisions and no basic laws on sports. Nevertheless, sports have already penetrated into people s lives and become a daily life, and professional sports are expanding day by day, sales of sporting goods are increasing, and sports facilities are increasing. Since sports have become an object of human rights values internationally and are an important national task, legislation and policies are needed to strengthen the security of sports rights.