ABSTRACT

Following the recent doping scandals that have brought the highest echelons of international sport into disrepute, this book examines the elitism at the core of the World Anti-Doping Agency and considers how the current World Anti-Doping Code might be restructured.

Analyzing the correlation between the commodification of sports and doping, and the role WADA plays in this context, it takes into consideration the perspectives of non-elite athletes as well as athletes from developing countries which have previously been excluded from the anti-doping discourse. It offers recommendations for improving the coordination and implementation of the World Anti-Doping Code and argues for the creation of a more inclusive anti-doping regime.

This is an important resource for students of sports law, sports management and sports ethics, as well as vital reading for sports administrators, sports sociologists, sports policy makers, sports lawyers and arbitrators, as well as athletes themselves.

chapter Chapter 1|25 pages

The anti-doping narrative

A case of self-legitimization

chapter Chapter 2|34 pages

The Russian doping scandal and the WADA Code

A flawed deal for a developing country/non-elite athlete?

chapter Chapter 3|49 pages

Relook at the WADA Code

An elitist paradigm or an inclusive document?

chapter Chapter 4|29 pages

WADA from a non-elite perspective

The missing link in the anti-doping discourse

chapter Chapter 5|30 pages

Changing the anti-doping narrative

Time to incorporate the subaltern discourse

chapter Chapter 6|4 pages

Conclusions