Lexington Books
Pages: 228
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-6218-8 • Hardback • November 2018 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
978-1-4985-6219-5 • eBook • November 2018 • $99.50 • (£77.00)
Zack Bowersox is lecturer of international affairs at the University of Georgia.
Chapter 1: Sport in Society
Chapter 2: Sport and the International System
Chapter 3: International Organization and Sport
Chapter 4: Human Rights and International Sporting Events
Chapter 5: Expressive Rights and International Sporting Events
Chapter 6: International Sporting Events and Human Trafficking
Chapter 7: Women’s Rights and International Sporting Events
Chapter 8: ISOs and Human Rights
“Bowersox provides a clear and thorough analysis of how sporting events are not only important to international politics, but may actually alter the way countries interact – both for good or ill. This impressive and balanced examination explores the ways in which hosting and participating in sporting events can have real practical implications for human and international security. The reader is left hoping that as the world confronts the challenges of xenophobia and nationalism, international sport may provide one path by which these division may be mended.”
— J. Patrick Rhamey Jr., Virginia Military Institute
Sport and politics has a dynamic and complex relationship, which is especially true of the Olympic Games and the World Cup. However, the impact of international sporting mega-events is not well studied. Zachary Bowersox details the evolution of these events in international politics, from serving as propaganda stages for despots to platforms of political expression for oppressed populations. Bowersox also addresses the effects of these events for sex trafficking, women’s rights, and labor standards. This book contributes specifically to the field of human rights, but it will also stimulate further research for students of sport and politics broadly.
— Marc S. Polizzi, Murray State University