1st Edition
Doping and Anti-Doping Policy in Sport Ethical, Legal and Social Perspectives
Introduction
1 Mike McNamee and Lauri Tarasti: Ethico-legal aspects of anti-doping legislation
2 James E. Coleman Jr. and Joshua Michael Levine: The Burden of Proof in Endogenous Substance Cases: A Masking Agent for Junk Science
3 David McArdle: Longitudinal profiling, sports arbitration and the woman who had nothing to lose. Some Thoughts on Pechstein versus the International Skating Union.
4 Werner Pitsch: Caught between mathematics and ethics: Some implications of imperfect doping test procedures
5 Bengt Kayser: On the presumption of guilt without proof of intentionality and other consequences of current anti-doping policy
6 John Hoberman: Athletes in handcuffs? The criminalisation of doping
7 Angela Schneider: Privacy rights, gene doping ethics
8 Ask Vest Christiansen: Testing citizens training recreationally in gyms
9 Rob Beamish: Steroids in the Court of Public Opinion: Roger Clemens versus The Mitchell Report
10 Martin Hardie: It’s not about the blood! Operacion Puerto and the end of modernity
11 Ivan Waddington: ‘A prison of measured time’? A sociologist looks at the WADA whereabouts system
12 Verner Møller: The expulsion of Michael Rasmussen from the Tour de France 2007 – Or what happened to the level playing field?
13 Dag Vidar Hanstad: Governance and the whereabouts system
14 John Gleaves: A critique of the contemporary trend towards severe anti-doping sanctions: Changing directions
Biography
Mike McNamee is Professor of Applied Ethics in the Department of Philosophy, History and Law in Healthcare, Swansea University, and is also a member of the Clinical Ethics Committee at Cardiff and Vale National Health Service Trust, UK. He is Series Editor of Ethics and Sport and Editor of the journal Sport, Ethics and Philosophy. He is a former President of the International Association for the Philosophy of Sport and the Founding Chair of the British Philosophy of Sport Association.
Verner Møller is Professor of Sports Science at Aarhus University, Denmark. He is the coordinator of the International Network of Humanistic Doping Research (INHDR) and a leading expert on the cultural and philosophical aspects of doping.






