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Sport governance no longer stirs public opinion only when scandals surface; it has become a persistent concern for a number of stakeholders, such as the media, sport followers, and corporates that produce and sponsor sport. Contemporary sport governance is characterised by tension between sport's potential for commercial benefit on the one hand and moral education and social development on the other. The perceived incompatibility of these two aspects has led to intense conversations in the media, administrative circles, and the public sphere about the need for ethics to be the key element of governance. The chapters in this volume explore the contemporary forms of governance that is structured by sport's extensive transnational networks, shifts in what the stakeholders mentioned above understand by 'ethics', and the emergence of new stakeholders. They identify as the two major directions of contemporary sport governance the growing significance of the non-West, especially in relation to event hosting, and the need for controlling the behaviour of emergent interest groups. The latter is a complex constellation of athletes, officials, supporters, lawyers, and politicians who share power and collectively determine corporate and non-profit governance, legal aspects, and regulatory mechanisms from within their subjective locations.
The chapters in this book were originally published in a special issue in Sport in Society.
List of contents
Introduction: ethical concerns in sport governance
Souvik Naha and David Hassan 1. Beyond governance: the need to improve the regulation of international sport
Jean-Loup Chappelet 2. Sport and politics in a complex age
David Hassan 3. Sport mega-events, the 'non-West' and the ethics of event hosting
Suzanne Dowse and Thomas Fletcher 4. Gulf autocrats and sports corruption: a marriage made in heaven
James M. Dorsey 5. Towards responsible policy-making in international sport: reforming the medical-scientific commissions
Bruce Kidd 6. Canada 2015: perceptions and experiences of the organisation and governance of the Women's World Cup
Carrie Dunn 7. 'Trust me I am a Football Agent'. The discursive practices of the players' agents in (un)professional football
Seamus Kelly and Dikaia Chatziefstathiou 8. Motorsport volunteerism: a form of social contract?
David Hassan and Chris Harding
About the author
Souvik Naha is a Guest Lecturer in History at West Bengal State University, Kolkota, India. He has edited
Global and Transnational Sport: Ambiguous Border, Connected Domains (2018) and, with Kausik Bandyopadhyay and Shakya Mitra,
FIFA World Cup and Beyond: Sport, Culture, Media and Governance (2018). He is the editor of
Soccer & Society.
David Hassan has published 15 books and 175 other research outputs. He was awarded a Distinguished Research Fellowship from Ulster University, UK, in recognition of his outstanding contribution to research. He has held several leadership roles at the University, including Head of School, Head of Research Graduate School, Provost of the Belfast and Jordanstown campuses, and Associate Dean of the Faculty of Life and Health Sciences (Global Engagement).
Summary
This book examines the extent to which the question of ethics underpins the contemporary landscape of sport governance. The chapters originally published in a special issue in Sport in Society.