Uppercut
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Might be good to have a general thread about this. How do people feel about it?
Having belatedly woken up to its existence, I feel like the concept is now very over-applied in Western media. Any non-democratic country hosting a sports event is now assumed to be doing so strategically to improve their reputation, when the reality is usually just that some influential figure happens to really like Boxing or Golf. The effect is usually another round of media coverage about humans rights violations, so if sportswashing is the idea, it doesn't seem to work very often. My opinion of Qatar or Abu Dhabi definitely hasn't improved since they took over major football clubs, and surely I'm not in the minority there. Perhaps the effect is a bit more subtle than that.
Ironically the most flagrant and successful modern example of sportswashing is Russia hosting the 2018 World Cup, which was barely criticised by the media at all in comparison to Middle Eastern events.
Likewise the conversation is struggling to move past boycott as a possible solution. Without any end goal this always strikes me as very self-indulgent - you do nothing to help the victims of those regimes, and may even make things worse, but you get to feel like it has nothing to do with you. I do also find it icky to watch sport built on morally abhorrent foundations, and I'm less likely to do it, but I know I'm not doing the world a favour by switching off. Maybe I'm wrong and there is some tangible impact. I'd be interested to learn more about the sporting boycotts of South Africa. I'm sceptical of the idea that they had much political impact, but I don't know enough about it to say.
I saw some footballers were talking about making participation in the Qatar World Cup contingent on compensation for migrant workers, which is a much better idea, though it seems unlikely to happen. Ideally the media would start pressuring players and organisations to extract political concessions in exchange for participation. At the moment it's very "why are you participating you scumbag" and I'm not sure how it helps anyone.
Having belatedly woken up to its existence, I feel like the concept is now very over-applied in Western media. Any non-democratic country hosting a sports event is now assumed to be doing so strategically to improve their reputation, when the reality is usually just that some influential figure happens to really like Boxing or Golf. The effect is usually another round of media coverage about humans rights violations, so if sportswashing is the idea, it doesn't seem to work very often. My opinion of Qatar or Abu Dhabi definitely hasn't improved since they took over major football clubs, and surely I'm not in the minority there. Perhaps the effect is a bit more subtle than that.
Ironically the most flagrant and successful modern example of sportswashing is Russia hosting the 2018 World Cup, which was barely criticised by the media at all in comparison to Middle Eastern events.
Likewise the conversation is struggling to move past boycott as a possible solution. Without any end goal this always strikes me as very self-indulgent - you do nothing to help the victims of those regimes, and may even make things worse, but you get to feel like it has nothing to do with you. I do also find it icky to watch sport built on morally abhorrent foundations, and I'm less likely to do it, but I know I'm not doing the world a favour by switching off. Maybe I'm wrong and there is some tangible impact. I'd be interested to learn more about the sporting boycotts of South Africa. I'm sceptical of the idea that they had much political impact, but I don't know enough about it to say.
I saw some footballers were talking about making participation in the Qatar World Cup contingent on compensation for migrant workers, which is a much better idea, though it seems unlikely to happen. Ideally the media would start pressuring players and organisations to extract political concessions in exchange for participation. At the moment it's very "why are you participating you scumbag" and I'm not sure how it helps anyone.