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Global Games: Sports, Politics and Society
An International Symposium

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The Sydney 2000 Olympic games will convene against the backdrop of ongoing revelations of International Olympic Committee corruption and efforts to reform itself. Historic adversaries -- Japan and Korea -- will co-host the 2002 World Cup soccer finals. In the U.S., controversy over the impact of Title IX persists in the aftermath of the U.S. Women's Soccer Team World Cup victory. Through the prisms of international relations, social history, economics, anthropology, human rights, cultural studies, the arts, and science, EPIIC's sixteenth annual symposium provided a critical, comparative insight into sport and international athletic competition.

What is the historical interplay of ideology, politics, and athletics? In the context of the political use and abuse of sport, what are the relationships between sport and foreign and domestic policies, from the massacre at the 1972 Munich Olympics to the recent U.S.-Iran wrestling competition? This symposium also explored sport in the context of social integration. How do sports influence, and how are they influenced by, identity, nationalism, class, race, ethnicity, gender, and religion? EPIIC considered the politics of race and the use of sport as racial competition, from South Africa to the Caribbean.

Among other issues addressed were: the global economics of sport, including global capitalism, international marketing, labor relations, and corruption; athletic talent migration; the potential for enhancement or "dehumanization" through genetic engineering and hormonal manipulation; the global diffusion of Western modern sports and the impact on indigenous traditions; and the roles of media and popular culture.

Finally, we were pleased to award Dr. Jean Mayer Global Citizenship Awards to Dr. Richard Lapchick, Director of the Center for the Study of Sport in Society at Northeastern University, U.S. Representative Patsy Mink, and four-time Olympic Gold Medalist Mr. Johann Olav Koss. We also recognized four Tufts alumni: the Executive Director of the Institute for International Sport at the University of Rhode Island, Dan Doyle; a Senior Producer for NBC Sports, Lisa Lax; the Associate Director for Sports Programs, Educational Initiatives and External Relations for World T.E.A.M. Sports, Michael Savicki; and the President and CEO of the Milwaukee Brewers, Wendy Selig-Prieb.

PRELIMINARY PROGRAMS

Sunday, February 6

Monday, February 7

Wednesday, February 9

SYMPOSIUM

Thursday, February 10

Friday, February 11

Saturday, February 12

Sunday, February 13

The Boston Globe: "A Pitching Change is Needed," by Howard Manly (from an article published Sunday, February 13)

"Jim Cohen has been at ESPN nine years, as chief correspondent and now senior coordinating producer. But, at heart, he's still an old-school newspaper man, his sports jacket a bit rumpled, his tie never straight. And as an old newspaper guy - with stints at the Philadelphia Inquirer, Milwaukee Journal, and Springfield Union - Cohen is appalled at the so-called television journalists at his network cozying up in commercials with the very people they are assigned to cover.

''It's unacceptable,'' he told a symposium on sports journalism at Tufts Friday..." [Click here for FULL TEXT of article.]

The Village Voice: "Building Toward a Political Sports Movement," by Jay Weiner (from an article published February 23-29)

"It's fair to say that never in the history of the universe had the World Trade Organization, steroids, Nelson Mandela, and NFL salary caps been mentioned in the same collective breath. But last weekend that range of seeming non sequiturs was uttered at Tufts University, where a gathering of sports activists and academics came together to share ideas about the status and future of sports. Most attendees -- including sports economist Andrew Zimbalist; Richard Lapchick, head of the Center for the Study of Sport in Society; and über-sports journalist Frank DeFord -- left the suburban Boston campus determined to change the face, direction, and soul of corporatized sports..." [Click here for FULL TEXT of article.]

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