ABSTRACT

Why do many athletes risk their careers by taking performance enhancing drugs? Do the highly competitive pressures elite sports teach athletes to win at any cost?

In order to understand the complex relationships between sport and other aspects of society, it is necessary to strip away our preconceptions of what sport is, and to examine, in as detached a manner as possible, the way in which the world of sport actually functions. This fully updated edition of Ivan Waddington’s classic introduction to drugs in sport examines the key terms and key issues in sport, drugs and performance and is designed to help new students explore these controversial subjects, now so central to the study of modern sport. The book addresses topics such as:

  • the emergence of drugs in sport and changing patterns of use
  • the development of an objective, sociological understanding
  • sports law, policy and administration
  • WADA, NGB’s and the sporting federations
  • case studies of football and cycling
  • the case of sports medicine.

An Introduction to Drugs in Sport: Addicted to Winning is a landmark work in sports studies.  Using interview transcripts, case studies and press cuttings to ground theory in reality, students and lecturers alike will find this an immensely readable and enriching resource.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

Part I Sport and health

chapter 1|22 pages

Sport, health and ideology

chapter 2|15 pages

Sport, health and public policy

Some policy issues and problems

chapter 3|11 pages

Health-related issues in child sport

Child abuse and sex abuse

chapter 4|28 pages

Doctors’ dilemmas

Conflicts in the role of club medical staff in professional football

part |2 pages

Part II Sport and drugs

chapter 5|7 pages

Doping in sport

Problems of involvement and detachment

chapter 7|21 pages

Doping in sport

Towards a sociological understanding

chapter 8|18 pages

The other side of sports medicine

Sports medicine and the development of performance-enhancing drugs

chapter 9|17 pages

Doping in sport

A case study of cycling and the 1998 Tour de France

chapter 10|17 pages

Doping control in sport

A critical analysis

chapter 11|10 pages

Conclusion