ABSTRACT

The issue of doping has been the most widely discussed problem in sports ethics and is one of the most prominent issues across sports studies, the sports sciences and their constituent disciplines. This book adds uniquely to that catalogue of discourses by focusing on extant anti-doping policy and doping practices from a range of multi-disciplinary perspectives (specifically ethical, legal, and social scientific).

With contributions from a world-class team of scholars and legal practitioners from the UK, Europe and North America, the book explores key contemporary issues such as:

  • sports medicine
  • international doping policy
  • the whereabouts system
  • the criminalization of doping
  • privacy rights, gene doping and ethics
  • imperfection in doping test procedures
  • steroid use in the general population.

Doping and Anti-Doping Policy in Sport offers an important critique of contemporary anti-doping policy and is essential reading for any advanced student, researcher or policy maker with an interest in this vital issue.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|23 pages

The Burden of Proof in Endogenous Substance cases

A masking agent for junk science 1

chapter 3|16 pages

Longitudinal Profiling, Sports Arbitration and the Woman who had nothing to lose

Some thoughts on Pechstein v. International Skating Union

chapter 4|18 pages

Caught between mathematics and ethics

Some implications of imperfect doping test procedures

chapter 6|12 pages

‘Athletes in handcuffs?'

The criminalization of doping

chapter 8|16 pages

Bodily violations

Testing citizens training recreationally in gyms

chapter 9|18 pages

Steroids in the court of public opinion

Roger Clemens versus the Mitchell Report

chapter 10|23 pages

It's not about the blood!

Operación Puerto and the end of modernity

chapter 11|17 pages

‘A prison of measured time'?

A sociologist looks at the WADA whereabouts system

chapter 12|17 pages

The expulsion of Michael Rasmussen from the Tour de France 2007

A manifestation of the ideal of a level playing field?

chapter 13|16 pages

Governance and the whereabouts system

A Norwegian case study