Aboriginal Sport in the City: Implications for Participation, Health, and Policy in Canada

IF 0.4 Q3 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY Aboriginal Policy Studies Pub Date : 2014-03-30 DOI:10.5663/aps.v3i1-2.21707
Janice Forsyth
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Abstract

The 2014 Olympic Games in Sochi, Russia have just ended, and I’m taking a moment to reflect on a pattern I’ve noticed over the past several Games. As the Director of the International Centre for Olympic Studies at Western University in London, Ontario, it’s my job to watch the Games as they unfold in real time and to provide media with commentary and insight on whatever producers deem to be newsworthy items. Well, I don’t really “watch” the Games so much as I follow news about them, mostly online, and monitor the trends in reporting. It’s my responsibility to influence the type of information that gets relayed to the public by educating journalists on the issues behind their stories. For instance, the estimated $3 billion USD that Putin spent on security for the 2014 Olympic and Paralympic Games to minimize the threat of terrorism also helps to legitimize the control of civilians by making sure peaceful protestors don’t disrupt the biggest party in the world by inserting non-sporting narratives, like Native rights and LGBTQ 1 issues, into the public realm. The increased use of advanced surveillance systems and military force to control the public at the Olympic Games is a new phenomenon, and a frightening one at that, for the way people appear to be willing to give up important freedoms in exchange for a massive celebration organized around athletic competitions that leave mostly unused venues and huge public debt in their place. Most journalists understand these patterns when they are given an opportunity to discuss and digest them, but claim there are limitations to what they can say or write, especially if they are working for Olympic broadcasters, which go heavy on sports reporting and light on analysis. All too often, commercial interests trump the need for information.
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城市中的土著体育:对加拿大参与、健康和政策的影响
2014年俄罗斯索契奥运会刚刚结束,我花了一点时间来反思我在过去几届奥运会中注意到的一个模式。作为安大略省伦敦西部大学国际奥林匹克研究中心的主任,我的工作是实时观看奥运会,并就制片人认为有新闻价值的项目向媒体提供评论和见解。嗯,我并没有真正“观看”奥运会,而是关注有关奥运会的新闻,主要是在网上,并监控报道的趋势。我有责任通过教育记者了解他们报道背后的问题,来影响传递给公众的信息类型。例如,普京在2014年奥运会和残奥会的安保上花费了大约30亿美元,以最大限度地减少恐怖主义的威胁,这也有助于使对平民的控制合法化,因为它确保和平抗议者不会通过将土著权利和LGBTQ问题等非体育话题插入公共领域来扰乱世界上最大的派对。在奥运会上,越来越多地使用先进的监控系统和军事力量来控制公众,这是一个新现象,而且是一个令人恐惧的现象,因为人们似乎愿意放弃重要的自由,以换取围绕体育比赛组织的大规模庆祝活动,而这些活动留下的大多是闲置的场地和巨额的公共债务。大多数记者在有机会讨论和消化这些模式时,都能理解这些模式,但他们声称,他们能说或能写的东西是有限的,特别是如果他们为奥运转播机构工作,这些机构重体育报道,轻分析。商业利益往往凌驾于对信息的需求之上。
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Aboriginal Policy Studies
Aboriginal Policy Studies SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
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