Abstract
The Football World Cup in Qatar 2022 is used as a case study to examine which novel concepts can be used by human rights-oriented national sports federations to act adequately politically at sporting mega-events. The key concepts outlined here are: (1) ‘Policy monopoly’: The legitimate right of a host nation or an international sports organization (FIFA/IOC) to politicize. (2) ‘Over-politicization’: The politicization of the host nation, international sports organization or national federation beyond the legitimate politicization mentioned above. (3) ‘Counter-politics’: Other actors–such as e.g. national federations/national teams/athletes–who manifest legitimate political protests against ‘over-politicisation’.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Sport in Society |
ISSN | 1743-0437 |
DOIs |
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Publication status | Accepted/In press - 2024 |
Bibliographical note
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