FIFA (Fédération Internationale de Football Association)

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A01=Alan Tomlinson
Author_Alan Tomlinson
Bin Hammam
blatter
blazer
Category=SCBG
Category=SFBC
chuck
Chuck Blazer
confederations
congress
continental
corruption scandals
cultural industry analysis
cup
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_sports-fitness
FIFA Committee
FIFA Congress
FIFA ExCo
FIFA Family
FIFA Finance
FIFA House
FIFA Partner
FIFA President
FIFA Statute
FIFA Woman's World Cup
FIFA Woman’s World Cup
FIFA World Cup South Africa
FIFA World Cup Sponsor
FIFA's Executive Committee
FIFA’s Executive Committee
football administration power dynamics
Football Association
global sports organisations
international sport politics
IOC Decision
IOC Presidency
Men's World Cup
mens
Men’s World Cup
postcolonial nationalism
sepp
sports governance
UEFA Executive
UEFA President
UEFA Ranking
UK Association
West Germany
world
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415498302
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Apr 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Founded in 1904 by representatives of the sporting organisations of six European nations then expanding into the Americas, Asia and Africa FIFA has developed to become one of the most high profile and lucrative businesses in the global consumer and cultural industry. Recent years however have been characterised by a series of crises leaving the organisation open to critique and exposure, and creating a soap operatic narrative of increasing interest to the global media.

In this critical new account of one of the world’s most important sporting institutions, Professor Alan Tomlinson investigates the history of FIFA and the underlying political dynamics characterising its growth. The book explores the influence of the men who have led FIFA, the emergence of the World Cup as FIFA’s exclusive product, FIFA’s relationships with other federations and associations, the crises that have shaped its recent history, and the issues and challenges that are likely to shape its future. Particular focus is given to selected moments in the post- Havelange administration and the way in which FIFA, its current president Joseph Blatter and some key close colleagues have responded to and survived successive scandals. The book provides a foundation for understanding the growth and development of what is widely accepted as the world’s most popular sport; sheds light on the shifting politics of nationalism in the post-colonial period; and reveals the opportunistic forms of personal aggrandizement shaping an increasingly media-influenced and globalizing world in which international sport was both a harbinger and an early reflection of these trends and forces.

Fascinating and provocative, this is essential reading for anybody with an interest in soccer, sport and society, sports governance, or global organisations.

Alan Tomlinson is Professor of Leisure Studies at the University of Brighton. His most recent roles have been Director of Research & Development (Social Sciences) and Director of Postgraduate Studies (Arts). His research interests are in the sociology and socio-cultural study of sport and leisure cultures and the sociology of consumption, in particular the politics and culture of the sport spectacle. Recent books include the Dictionary of Sports Studies (Oxford University Press), The World Atlas of Sport (Myriad/New Internationalist), Watching the Olympics: Politics, Power and Representation (Routledge, edited with John Sugden), and Understanding Sport: A socio-cultural study, Second Edition (Routledge, co-author with John Horne, Garry Whannel, and Kath Woodward).

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