编辑

IF 0.1 Q4 HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM International Sports Studies Pub Date : 2021-11-09 DOI:10.30819/iss.43-1.01
J. Saunders
{"title":"编辑","authors":"J. Saunders","doi":"10.30819/iss.43-1.01","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n It was the Canadian philosopher Marshall McLuhan who first introduced the term\n‘global village’ into the lexicon, almost fifty years ago. He was referring to the\nphenomenon of global interconnectedness of which we are all too aware today. At that\ntime, we were witnessing the world just opening up. In 1946, British Airways had\ncommenced a twice weekly service from London to New York. The flight involved one\nor two touch downs en-route and took a scheduled 19 hours and 45 minutes. By the time\nMcLuhan had published his book “Understanding media; the extensions of man”, there\nwere regular services by jet around the globe. London to Sydney was travelled in just\nunder 35 hours. Moving forward to a time immediately pre-covid, there were over 30\nnon-stop flights a day in each direction between London and New York. The travel time\nfrom London to Sydney had been cut by a third, to slightly under 22 hours, with just one\ntouchdown en-route. The world has well and truly ‘opened up’. No place is unreachable\nby regular services. But that is just one part of the picture. In 1962, the very first live\ntelevision pictures were transmitted across the Atlantic, via satellite. It was a time when\nsports’ fans would tune in besides a crackling radio set to hear commentary of their\nfavourite game relayed from the other side of the world.\n\n \nToday of course, not only can we watch a live telecast of the Olympic Games in the\ncomfort of our own homes wherever the games are being held, but we can pick up a\ntelephone and talk face to face with friends and relatives in real time, wherever they\nmay be in the world. To today’s generation – generation Z – this does not seem in the\nleast bit remarkable. Indeed, they have been nicknamed ‘the connected generation’\nprecisely because such a degree of human interconnectedness no longer seems worth\ncommenting on. The media technology and the transport advances that underpin this\nlevel of connectedness, have become taken for granted assumptions to them. This is why\nthe global events of 2020 and the associated public health related reactions, have proved\nto be so remarkable to them. It is mass travel and the closeness and variety of human\ncontact in day-to-day interactions, that have provided the breeding ground for the\npandemic. Consequently, moving around and sharing close proximity with many\nstrangers, have been the activities that have had to be curbed, as the initial primary\nmeans to manage the spread of the virus. This has caused hardship to many, either\nthrough the loss of a job and the associated income or, the lengthy enforced separation\nfrom family and friends – for the many who find themselves living and working far\nremoved from their original home.\n\n \n\nMcLuhan’s powerful metaphor was ahead of its time. His thoughts were centred\naround media and electronic communications well prior to the notion of a ‘physical’\npandemic, which today has provided an equally potent image of how all of our fortunes\nhave become intertwined, no matter where we sit in the world. Yet it is this event which\nseems paradoxically to have for the first time forced us to consider more closely the path\nof progress pursued over the last half century. It is as if we are experiencing for the first\ntime the unleashing of powerful and competing forces, which are both centripetal and\ncentrifugal. On the one hand we are in a world where we have a World Health\nOrganisation. This is a body which has acted as a global force, first declaring the\npandemic and subsequently acting in response to it as a part of its brief for international\npublic health. It has brought the world’s scientists and global health professionals\ntogether to accelerate the research and development process and develop new norms and\nstandards to contain the spread of the coronavirus pandemic and help care for those\naffected.\n\n \n\nAt the same time, we have been witnessing nations retreating from each other and\nclosing their borders in order to restrict the interaction of their citizens with those from\nother nations around the world. We have perceived that danger and risk are increased\nby international travel and human to human interaction. As a result, increasingly\ncommunication has been carried out from the safety and comfort of one’s own home,\nwith electronic media taking the place of personal interaction in the real world. The\nchange to the media dominated world, foreseen by McLuhan a half century ago, has\nbeen hastened and consolidated by the threats posed by Covid 19. Real time interactions\ncan be conducted more safely and more economically by means of the global reach of\nthe internet and the ever-enhanced technologies that are being offered to facilitate that.\nYet at a geopolitical level prior to Covid 19, the processes of globalism and nationalism\nwere already being recognised as competing forces. In many countries, tensions have\nemerged between those who are benefitting from the opportunities presented by the\ndevelopment of free trade between countries and those who are invested in more\ntraditional ventures, set in their own nations and communities. The emerging\nbeneficiaries have become characterised as the global elites. Their demographic profile\nis one associated with youth, education and progressive social ideas. However, they are\ncounter-balanced by those who, rather than opportunities, have experienced threats from\nthe disruptions and turbulence around them. Among the ideas challenged, have been the\nexpected certainties of employment, social values and the security with which many\ngrew up. Industries which have been the lifeblood of their communities are facing\nextinction and even the security of housing and a roof over the heads of self and family\nmay be under threat. In such circumstances, some people may see waves of new\nimmigrants, technology, and changing social values as being tides which need to be\nturned back. Their profile is characterised by a demographic less equipped to face such\nchanges - the more mature, less well educated and less mobile. Yet this tension appears\nto be creating something more than just the latest version of the generational divide. The\nrecent clashes between Republicans and Democrats in the US have provided a very\npotent example of these societal stresses. The US has itself exported some of these\narenas of conflict to the rest of the world. Black lives Matter and #Me too, are social\nmovements with their foundation in the US which have found their way far beyond the\nimmediate contexts which gave them birth. In the different national settings where these\nvarious tensions have emerged, they have been characterised through labels such as left\nand right, progressive and traditional, the ‘haves’ versus the ‘have nots’ etc. Yet\ncommon to all of this growing competitiveness between ideologies and values is a\ncommon thread. The common thread lies in the notion of competition itself. It finds\nitself expressed most potently in the spread and adoption of ideas based on what has\nbeen termed the neoliberal values of the free market.\n\n \n\nThese values have become ingrained in the language and concepts we employ every\nday. Thus, everything has a price and ultimately the price can be represented by a dollar\nvalue. We see this process of commodification around us on a daily basis. Sports studies’\nscholars have long drawn attention to its continuing growth in the world of sport,\nespecially in situations when it overwhelms the human characteristics of the athletes\nwho are at the very heart of sport. When the dollar value of the athlete and their\nperformance becomes more important than the individual and the game, then we find\nourselves at the heart of some of the core problems reported today. It is at the point\nwhere sport changes from an experience, where the athletes develop themselves and\nbecome more complete persons experiencing positive and enriching interactions with\nfellow athletes, to an environment where young athletes experience stress and mental\nand physical ill health as result of their experiences. Those who are supremely talented\n(and lucky?) are rewarded with fabulous riches. Others can find themselves cast out on\nthe scrap heap as a result of an unfair selection process or just the misfortune of injury.\nSport as always, has proved to be a mirror of life in reflecting this process in the world\nat large, highlighting the heights that can be climbed by the fortunate as well as the\ndepths that can be plumbed by the ill-fated.\n\n \n\nAdvocates of the free-market approach will point to the opportunities it can offer.\nFigures can show that in a period of capitalist organised economies, there has been an\nunprecedented reduction in the amount of poverty in the world. Despite rapid growth in\npopulations, there has been some extraordinary progress in lifting people out of extreme\npoverty. Between 1990 and 2010, the numbers in poverty fell by half as a share of the\ntotal population in developing countries, from 43% to 21%—a reduction of almost 1\nbillion people (The Economist Leader, June 1st, 2013). Nonetheless the critics of\ncapitalism will continue to point to an increasing gap between the haves and don’t haves\nand specifically a decline in the ‘middle classes’, which have for so long provided the\nbackbone of stable democratic societies.\n\n \n\nThis delicate balance between retreating into our own boundaries as a means to\nmanage the pandemic and resuming open borders to prevent economic damage to those\nwhose businesses and employment depend upon the continuing movement of people\nand goods, is one which is being agonised over at this time in liberal democratic societies\naround the world. The experience of the pandemic has varied between countries, not\nsolely because of the strategies adopted by politicians, but also because of the current\nhealth systems and varying social and economic conditions of life in different parts of\nthe world. For many of us, the crises and social disturbances noted above have been\nplayed out on our television sc","PeriodicalId":40315,"journal":{"name":"International Sports Studies","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2021-11-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Editorial\",\"authors\":\"J. Saunders\",\"doi\":\"10.30819/iss.43-1.01\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"\\n It was the Canadian philosopher Marshall McLuhan who first introduced the term\\n‘global village’ into the lexicon, almost fifty years ago. He was referring to the\\nphenomenon of global interconnectedness of which we are all too aware today. At that\\ntime, we were witnessing the world just opening up. In 1946, British Airways had\\ncommenced a twice weekly service from London to New York. The flight involved one\\nor two touch downs en-route and took a scheduled 19 hours and 45 minutes. By the time\\nMcLuhan had published his book “Understanding media; the extensions of man”, there\\nwere regular services by jet around the globe. London to Sydney was travelled in just\\nunder 35 hours. Moving forward to a time immediately pre-covid, there were over 30\\nnon-stop flights a day in each direction between London and New York. The travel time\\nfrom London to Sydney had been cut by a third, to slightly under 22 hours, with just one\\ntouchdown en-route. The world has well and truly ‘opened up’. No place is unreachable\\nby regular services. But that is just one part of the picture. In 1962, the very first live\\ntelevision pictures were transmitted across the Atlantic, via satellite. It was a time when\\nsports’ fans would tune in besides a crackling radio set to hear commentary of their\\nfavourite game relayed from the other side of the world.\\n\\n \\nToday of course, not only can we watch a live telecast of the Olympic Games in the\\ncomfort of our own homes wherever the games are being held, but we can pick up a\\ntelephone and talk face to face with friends and relatives in real time, wherever they\\nmay be in the world. To today’s generation – generation Z – this does not seem in the\\nleast bit remarkable. Indeed, they have been nicknamed ‘the connected generation’\\nprecisely because such a degree of human interconnectedness no longer seems worth\\ncommenting on. The media technology and the transport advances that underpin this\\nlevel of connectedness, have become taken for granted assumptions to them. This is why\\nthe global events of 2020 and the associated public health related reactions, have proved\\nto be so remarkable to them. It is mass travel and the closeness and variety of human\\ncontact in day-to-day interactions, that have provided the breeding ground for the\\npandemic. Consequently, moving around and sharing close proximity with many\\nstrangers, have been the activities that have had to be curbed, as the initial primary\\nmeans to manage the spread of the virus. This has caused hardship to many, either\\nthrough the loss of a job and the associated income or, the lengthy enforced separation\\nfrom family and friends – for the many who find themselves living and working far\\nremoved from their original home.\\n\\n \\n\\nMcLuhan’s powerful metaphor was ahead of its time. His thoughts were centred\\naround media and electronic communications well prior to the notion of a ‘physical’\\npandemic, which today has provided an equally potent image of how all of our fortunes\\nhave become intertwined, no matter where we sit in the world. Yet it is this event which\\nseems paradoxically to have for the first time forced us to consider more closely the path\\nof progress pursued over the last half century. It is as if we are experiencing for the first\\ntime the unleashing of powerful and competing forces, which are both centripetal and\\ncentrifugal. On the one hand we are in a world where we have a World Health\\nOrganisation. This is a body which has acted as a global force, first declaring the\\npandemic and subsequently acting in response to it as a part of its brief for international\\npublic health. It has brought the world’s scientists and global health professionals\\ntogether to accelerate the research and development process and develop new norms and\\nstandards to contain the spread of the coronavirus pandemic and help care for those\\naffected.\\n\\n \\n\\nAt the same time, we have been witnessing nations retreating from each other and\\nclosing their borders in order to restrict the interaction of their citizens with those from\\nother nations around the world. We have perceived that danger and risk are increased\\nby international travel and human to human interaction. As a result, increasingly\\ncommunication has been carried out from the safety and comfort of one’s own home,\\nwith electronic media taking the place of personal interaction in the real world. The\\nchange to the media dominated world, foreseen by McLuhan a half century ago, has\\nbeen hastened and consolidated by the threats posed by Covid 19. Real time interactions\\ncan be conducted more safely and more economically by means of the global reach of\\nthe internet and the ever-enhanced technologies that are being offered to facilitate that.\\nYet at a geopolitical level prior to Covid 19, the processes of globalism and nationalism\\nwere already being recognised as competing forces. In many countries, tensions have\\nemerged between those who are benefitting from the opportunities presented by the\\ndevelopment of free trade between countries and those who are invested in more\\ntraditional ventures, set in their own nations and communities. The emerging\\nbeneficiaries have become characterised as the global elites. Their demographic profile\\nis one associated with youth, education and progressive social ideas. However, they are\\ncounter-balanced by those who, rather than opportunities, have experienced threats from\\nthe disruptions and turbulence around them. Among the ideas challenged, have been the\\nexpected certainties of employment, social values and the security with which many\\ngrew up. Industries which have been the lifeblood of their communities are facing\\nextinction and even the security of housing and a roof over the heads of self and family\\nmay be under threat. In such circumstances, some people may see waves of new\\nimmigrants, technology, and changing social values as being tides which need to be\\nturned back. Their profile is characterised by a demographic less equipped to face such\\nchanges - the more mature, less well educated and less mobile. Yet this tension appears\\nto be creating something more than just the latest version of the generational divide. The\\nrecent clashes between Republicans and Democrats in the US have provided a very\\npotent example of these societal stresses. The US has itself exported some of these\\narenas of conflict to the rest of the world. Black lives Matter and #Me too, are social\\nmovements with their foundation in the US which have found their way far beyond the\\nimmediate contexts which gave them birth. In the different national settings where these\\nvarious tensions have emerged, they have been characterised through labels such as left\\nand right, progressive and traditional, the ‘haves’ versus the ‘have nots’ etc. Yet\\ncommon to all of this growing competitiveness between ideologies and values is a\\ncommon thread. The common thread lies in the notion of competition itself. It finds\\nitself expressed most potently in the spread and adoption of ideas based on what has\\nbeen termed the neoliberal values of the free market.\\n\\n \\n\\nThese values have become ingrained in the language and concepts we employ every\\nday. Thus, everything has a price and ultimately the price can be represented by a dollar\\nvalue. We see this process of commodification around us on a daily basis. Sports studies’\\nscholars have long drawn attention to its continuing growth in the world of sport,\\nespecially in situations when it overwhelms the human characteristics of the athletes\\nwho are at the very heart of sport. When the dollar value of the athlete and their\\nperformance becomes more important than the individual and the game, then we find\\nourselves at the heart of some of the core problems reported today. It is at the point\\nwhere sport changes from an experience, where the athletes develop themselves and\\nbecome more complete persons experiencing positive and enriching interactions with\\nfellow athletes, to an environment where young athletes experience stress and mental\\nand physical ill health as result of their experiences. Those who are supremely talented\\n(and lucky?) are rewarded with fabulous riches. Others can find themselves cast out on\\nthe scrap heap as a result of an unfair selection process or just the misfortune of injury.\\nSport as always, has proved to be a mirror of life in reflecting this process in the world\\nat large, highlighting the heights that can be climbed by the fortunate as well as the\\ndepths that can be plumbed by the ill-fated.\\n\\n \\n\\nAdvocates of the free-market approach will point to the opportunities it can offer.\\nFigures can show that in a period of capitalist organised economies, there has been an\\nunprecedented reduction in the amount of poverty in the world. Despite rapid growth in\\npopulations, there has been some extraordinary progress in lifting people out of extreme\\npoverty. Between 1990 and 2010, the numbers in poverty fell by half as a share of the\\ntotal population in developing countries, from 43% to 21%—a reduction of almost 1\\nbillion people (The Economist Leader, June 1st, 2013). Nonetheless the critics of\\ncapitalism will continue to point to an increasing gap between the haves and don’t haves\\nand specifically a decline in the ‘middle classes’, which have for so long provided the\\nbackbone of stable democratic societies.\\n\\n \\n\\nThis delicate balance between retreating into our own boundaries as a means to\\nmanage the pandemic and resuming open borders to prevent economic damage to those\\nwhose businesses and employment depend upon the continuing movement of people\\nand goods, is one which is being agonised over at this time in liberal democratic societies\\naround the world. The experience of the pandemic has varied between countries, not\\nsolely because of the strategies adopted by politicians, but also because of the current\\nhealth systems and varying social and economic conditions of life in different parts of\\nthe world. For many of us, the crises and social disturbances noted above have been\\nplayed out on our television sc\",\"PeriodicalId\":40315,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"International Sports Studies\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.1000,\"publicationDate\":\"2021-11-09\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"International Sports Studies\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.30819/iss.43-1.01\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q4\",\"JCRName\":\"HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Sports Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.30819/iss.43-1.01","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM","Score":null,"Total":0}
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大约五十年前,加拿大哲学家马歇尔·麦克卢汉首次将“地球村”一词引入词典。他指的是我们今天都非常清楚的全球互联现象。那时,我们正在目睹世界刚刚开放。1946年,英国航空公司开始提供从伦敦到纽约的每周两次的服务。该航班在途中进行了一两次着陆,按计划耗时19小时45分钟。当McLuhan出版了他的书《理解媒体;人的延伸》时,全球各地都有定期的喷气式飞机服务。从伦敦到悉尼只用了不到35个小时。展望新冠疫情之前,伦敦和纽约之间每天有30多个直飞航班。从伦敦到悉尼的旅行时间缩短了三分之一,略低于22小时,只有一次中途停留。世界已经完全真正地“开放”了。没有一个地方是无法通过常规服务到达的。但这只是画面的一部分。1962年,第一批电视直播画面通过卫星传送到大西洋彼岸。那是一个体育迷们除了收听噼里啪啦的收音机外,还可以收听世界另一端转播的他们最喜欢的比赛解说的时代。当然,今天,无论奥运会在哪里举行,我们不仅可以在自己的家里观看奥运会的电视直播,而且我们可以拿起工作室,与世界上任何地方的朋友和亲戚实时面对面交谈。对于今天的Z世代来说,这似乎一点也不了不起。事实上,他们被戏称为“互联一代”,正是因为这种程度的人类互联似乎不再值得评论。支撑这种互联水平的媒体技术和交通进步,对他们来说已经成为理所当然的假设。这就是为什么2020年的全球事件和相关的公共卫生相关反应对他们来说如此引人注目。正是大众旅行以及日常互动中人类接触的亲密性和多样性,为流行病提供了滋生的土壤。因此,作为最初控制病毒传播的灵长类动物,四处走动并与许多护林员近距离接触是必须加以遏制的活动。这给许多人带来了困难,无论是因为失去了工作和相关收入,还是因为长期被迫与家人和朋友分离——对于许多发现自己在远离原家的情况下生活和工作的人来说。麦克卢汉强有力的比喻是超前的。早在“物理”概念出现之前,他的思想就以媒体和电子通信为中心,如今,“物理”哲学提供了一个同样有力的图像,表明无论我们身处世界何处,我们所有的命运都是如何交织在一起的。然而,似乎矛盾的是,正是这一事件第一次迫使我们更仔细地思考过去半个世纪所追求的可悲进步。这就好像我们第一次经历了强大而竞争的力量的释放,这些力量既是向心的,也是离心的。一方面,我们所处的世界有一个世界卫生组织。这是一个作为全球力量的机构,首先宣布了这一流行病,随后作为其国际公共卫生简报的一部分对此作出回应。它将世界科学家和全球卫生专业人员聚集在一起,加快研发进程,制定新的规范和标准,以遏制冠状病毒大流行的传播,并帮助照顾受影响的人。与此同时,我们目睹了各国相互退缩,关闭边境,以限制本国公民与世界其他国家公民的互动。我们已经意识到,国际旅行和人与人之间的互动会增加危险和风险。因此,越来越多的交流是在自己家里安全舒适地进行的,电子媒体取代了现实世界中的个人互动。半个世纪前,麦克鲁汉预见到了媒体主导世界的变革,新冠肺炎19带来的威胁加速并巩固了这一变革。通过互联网的全球覆盖范围和不断增强的技术,可以更安全、更经济地进行实时互动。然而,在新冠肺炎疫情19之前的地缘政治层面上,全球主义和民族主义的进程已经被视为相互竞争的力量。 在许多国家,那些受益于国家间自由贸易发展带来的机遇的人和那些投资于本国和社区的更传统企业的人之间出现了紧张关系。新兴受益者已成为全球精英。他们的人口结构与青年、教育和进步社会思想有关。然而,他们被那些经历过周围混乱和动荡威胁的人(而不是机会)所制衡。在这些受到挑战的想法中,有就业、社会价值观和许多人成长的安全保障的预期确定性。一直是社区命脉的行业正面临灭绝,甚至住房安全和家庭安全也可能受到威胁。在这种情况下,一些人可能会认为新移民、技术和不断变化的社会价值观是需要逆转的潮流。他们的特点是,人口结构不太适合面对这些变化——更成熟、受教育程度更低、流动性更低。然而,这种紧张关系似乎不仅仅是代沟的最新版本。美国共和党和民主党之间的冲突为这些社会压力提供了一个非常有力的例子。美国自己也将其中一些冲突领域出口到了世界其他地区。“黑人的命也是命”(Black lives Matter)和“#我也是”(#Me too。在出现各种紧张局势的不同国家背景下,它们的特点是左派和右派、进步派和传统派、“富人”和“穷人”等。意识形态和价值观之间日益增长的竞争力是一个共同的线索。共同点在于竞争本身的概念。它最有力地表现在传播和采用基于所谓自由市场新自由主义价值观的思想上。这些价值观已经在我们日常使用的语言和概念中根深蒂固。因此,任何东西都有价格,最终价格可以用美元价值来表示。我们每天都会看到这种商品化的过程。长期以来,体育研究的学者们一直关注它在体育世界中的持续发展,尤其是在它压倒了运动员的人性特征的情况下,而运动员正是体育的核心。当运动员的美元价值和他们的表现变得比个人和比赛更重要时,我们发现自己处于今天报道的一些核心问题的核心。正是在这一点上,体育运动从一种体验转变为一种环境,在这种体验中,运动员发展自己,成为更完整的人,与其他运动员进行积极而丰富的互动,在这种环境中,年轻运动员因其经历而经历压力和身心健康问题。那些才华横溢(又幸运?)的人会得到丰厚的财富。其他人可能会因为不公平的选拔过程或只是受伤的不幸而被抛弃在垃圾堆上。事实证明,体育运动一如既往地反映了整个世界的这一过程,突出了幸运者可以攀登的高度,也突出了命运多舛的人可以攀登的深度。自由市场方法的倡导者会指出它可以提供的机会。数据可以表明,在资本主义有组织经济时期,世界上的贫困程度空前减少。尽管人口增长迅速,但在使人们摆脱极端贫困方面取得了一些非凡的进展。1990年至2010年间,发展中国家的贫困人口占总人口的比例下降了一半,从43%降至21%,减少了近10亿人(《经济学人领袖》,2013年6月1日)。尽管如此,资本主义的批评者将继续指出富人和穷人之间的差距越来越大,特别是“中产阶级”的衰落,长期以来,中产阶级一直是稳定民主社会的支柱。在退回我们自己的边界作为应对疫情的手段和恢复开放边界以防止对那些企业和就业依赖于人员和货物的持续流动的企业和就业造成经济损害之间,这种微妙的平衡是目前世界各地自由民主社会正在为之苦恼的。各国的疫情经历各不相同,这不仅是因为政客们采取的策略,还因为当前的卫生系统以及世界不同地区不同的社会和经济生活条件。
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Editorial
It was the Canadian philosopher Marshall McLuhan who first introduced the term ‘global village’ into the lexicon, almost fifty years ago. He was referring to the phenomenon of global interconnectedness of which we are all too aware today. At that time, we were witnessing the world just opening up. In 1946, British Airways had commenced a twice weekly service from London to New York. The flight involved one or two touch downs en-route and took a scheduled 19 hours and 45 minutes. By the time McLuhan had published his book “Understanding media; the extensions of man”, there were regular services by jet around the globe. London to Sydney was travelled in just under 35 hours. Moving forward to a time immediately pre-covid, there were over 30 non-stop flights a day in each direction between London and New York. The travel time from London to Sydney had been cut by a third, to slightly under 22 hours, with just one touchdown en-route. The world has well and truly ‘opened up’. No place is unreachable by regular services. But that is just one part of the picture. In 1962, the very first live television pictures were transmitted across the Atlantic, via satellite. It was a time when sports’ fans would tune in besides a crackling radio set to hear commentary of their favourite game relayed from the other side of the world. Today of course, not only can we watch a live telecast of the Olympic Games in the comfort of our own homes wherever the games are being held, but we can pick up a telephone and talk face to face with friends and relatives in real time, wherever they may be in the world. To today’s generation – generation Z – this does not seem in the least bit remarkable. Indeed, they have been nicknamed ‘the connected generation’ precisely because such a degree of human interconnectedness no longer seems worth commenting on. The media technology and the transport advances that underpin this level of connectedness, have become taken for granted assumptions to them. This is why the global events of 2020 and the associated public health related reactions, have proved to be so remarkable to them. It is mass travel and the closeness and variety of human contact in day-to-day interactions, that have provided the breeding ground for the pandemic. Consequently, moving around and sharing close proximity with many strangers, have been the activities that have had to be curbed, as the initial primary means to manage the spread of the virus. This has caused hardship to many, either through the loss of a job and the associated income or, the lengthy enforced separation from family and friends – for the many who find themselves living and working far removed from their original home. McLuhan’s powerful metaphor was ahead of its time. His thoughts were centred around media and electronic communications well prior to the notion of a ‘physical’ pandemic, which today has provided an equally potent image of how all of our fortunes have become intertwined, no matter where we sit in the world. Yet it is this event which seems paradoxically to have for the first time forced us to consider more closely the path of progress pursued over the last half century. It is as if we are experiencing for the first time the unleashing of powerful and competing forces, which are both centripetal and centrifugal. On the one hand we are in a world where we have a World Health Organisation. This is a body which has acted as a global force, first declaring the pandemic and subsequently acting in response to it as a part of its brief for international public health. It has brought the world’s scientists and global health professionals together to accelerate the research and development process and develop new norms and standards to contain the spread of the coronavirus pandemic and help care for those affected. At the same time, we have been witnessing nations retreating from each other and closing their borders in order to restrict the interaction of their citizens with those from other nations around the world. We have perceived that danger and risk are increased by international travel and human to human interaction. As a result, increasingly communication has been carried out from the safety and comfort of one’s own home, with electronic media taking the place of personal interaction in the real world. The change to the media dominated world, foreseen by McLuhan a half century ago, has been hastened and consolidated by the threats posed by Covid 19. Real time interactions can be conducted more safely and more economically by means of the global reach of the internet and the ever-enhanced technologies that are being offered to facilitate that. Yet at a geopolitical level prior to Covid 19, the processes of globalism and nationalism were already being recognised as competing forces. In many countries, tensions have emerged between those who are benefitting from the opportunities presented by the development of free trade between countries and those who are invested in more traditional ventures, set in their own nations and communities. The emerging beneficiaries have become characterised as the global elites. Their demographic profile is one associated with youth, education and progressive social ideas. However, they are counter-balanced by those who, rather than opportunities, have experienced threats from the disruptions and turbulence around them. Among the ideas challenged, have been the expected certainties of employment, social values and the security with which many grew up. Industries which have been the lifeblood of their communities are facing extinction and even the security of housing and a roof over the heads of self and family may be under threat. In such circumstances, some people may see waves of new immigrants, technology, and changing social values as being tides which need to be turned back. Their profile is characterised by a demographic less equipped to face such changes - the more mature, less well educated and less mobile. Yet this tension appears to be creating something more than just the latest version of the generational divide. The recent clashes between Republicans and Democrats in the US have provided a very potent example of these societal stresses. The US has itself exported some of these arenas of conflict to the rest of the world. Black lives Matter and #Me too, are social movements with their foundation in the US which have found their way far beyond the immediate contexts which gave them birth. In the different national settings where these various tensions have emerged, they have been characterised through labels such as left and right, progressive and traditional, the ‘haves’ versus the ‘have nots’ etc. Yet common to all of this growing competitiveness between ideologies and values is a common thread. The common thread lies in the notion of competition itself. It finds itself expressed most potently in the spread and adoption of ideas based on what has been termed the neoliberal values of the free market. These values have become ingrained in the language and concepts we employ every day. Thus, everything has a price and ultimately the price can be represented by a dollar value. We see this process of commodification around us on a daily basis. Sports studies’ scholars have long drawn attention to its continuing growth in the world of sport, especially in situations when it overwhelms the human characteristics of the athletes who are at the very heart of sport. When the dollar value of the athlete and their performance becomes more important than the individual and the game, then we find ourselves at the heart of some of the core problems reported today. It is at the point where sport changes from an experience, where the athletes develop themselves and become more complete persons experiencing positive and enriching interactions with fellow athletes, to an environment where young athletes experience stress and mental and physical ill health as result of their experiences. Those who are supremely talented (and lucky?) are rewarded with fabulous riches. Others can find themselves cast out on the scrap heap as a result of an unfair selection process or just the misfortune of injury. Sport as always, has proved to be a mirror of life in reflecting this process in the world at large, highlighting the heights that can be climbed by the fortunate as well as the depths that can be plumbed by the ill-fated. Advocates of the free-market approach will point to the opportunities it can offer. Figures can show that in a period of capitalist organised economies, there has been an unprecedented reduction in the amount of poverty in the world. Despite rapid growth in populations, there has been some extraordinary progress in lifting people out of extreme poverty. Between 1990 and 2010, the numbers in poverty fell by half as a share of the total population in developing countries, from 43% to 21%—a reduction of almost 1 billion people (The Economist Leader, June 1st, 2013). Nonetheless the critics of capitalism will continue to point to an increasing gap between the haves and don’t haves and specifically a decline in the ‘middle classes’, which have for so long provided the backbone of stable democratic societies. This delicate balance between retreating into our own boundaries as a means to manage the pandemic and resuming open borders to prevent economic damage to those whose businesses and employment depend upon the continuing movement of people and goods, is one which is being agonised over at this time in liberal democratic societies around the world. The experience of the pandemic has varied between countries, not solely because of the strategies adopted by politicians, but also because of the current health systems and varying social and economic conditions of life in different parts of the world. For many of us, the crises and social disturbances noted above have been played out on our television sc
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来源期刊
International Sports Studies
International Sports Studies HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
2
期刊介绍: International Sports Studies (ISS) is a scholarly journal in the field of physical education and sport with a unique focus. Its aim is to advance understanding and communication between members of the global community who share a professional, personal or scholarly interest in the state and development of physical education and sport around the world. International Sports Studies (ISS) is today without paradigmatic prejudice and reflects an eclectic approach to the task of understanding physical education and sport in the contemporary world. It asks only that its contributors can add to knowledge about international physical education and sport studies through studies involving comparisons between regional, national and international settings or by providing unique insights into specific national and local phenomena which contribute to an understanding that can be shared across as well as within national borders.
期刊最新文献
Quality Physical Education Perceptions Among PE Professionals: an Exploratory Factor Analysis Understanding Quality Physical Education from the Perspective of Asian PE Professionals The Perception of Quality Physical Education in China Voices from PE Professionals in Mindanao: Expectations Underlying Quality Physical Education Development Quality Physical Education (QPE) Measurement Tool Development
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