1st Edition

Global Markets and Global Impact of Sports SportsWorld

Edited By John Nauright, Sarah Zipp Copyright 2019
184 Pages
by Routledge

184 Pages
by Routledge

184 Pages
by Routledge

This book is a concept we use to explain the invasive and pervasive role of sport in global society and in each country around the world. From the origins of modern sports to today, sports have become more and more commercial, global, and universally understood as important parts of economies, cultures, and political debates. The 2018 thawing of relations on the Korean Peninsula, and between... Read more

Introduction - The twenty-first-century SportsWorld: global markets and global impact  1. Contested epistemology: theory and method of international sport studies  2. Revisiting Gustave Le Bon’s crowd theory in light of present-day critique  3. The new sporting Cold War: implications of the Russian doping allegations for international relations and sport  4. Origin, diffusion and development of polo: an East to West cultural flow  5. Political economy and judo: the globalization of a traditional Japanese sport  6. Leveraging participation in Olympic sports: a call for experiential qualitative case study research  7. Boosting ice hockey in China: political economy, mega-events and community  8. An analysis of Glasgow’s decision to bid for the 2014 Commonwealth Games  9. Platform politics: sport events and the affordances of digital and social media  10. NBC’s televised media portrayal of female athletes in the 2016 Rio Summer Olympic Games: a critical feminist view  11. A destination development by building a brand image and sport event tourism: a case of Sport City USA  12. Sport for development with ‘at risk’ girls in St. Lucia

Biography

John Nauright is Chair and Professor in the Department of Kinesiology, Health Promotion and Recreation at the University of North Texas, Denton, USA. He has published numerous and award-winning works on sport in global society.





Sarah Zipp is a Lecturer in Sports Studies in the Faculty of Health Science and Sport at the University of Stirling, UK. Her work focuses on gender and development in sport.