More Than A Game: Sport, Legitimacy and Unrecognised States

Authors

Pender, Kieran

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Australian National University

Abstract

This research analyses the use of sport by unrecognised states for political legitimacy purposes. These unusual territorial entities, fulfilling the empirical criteria of statehood yet lacking recognition, exist with a deficit of legitimacy. While the legitimation strategies adopted by unrecognised states have been scrutinised in several recent studies, none have fully interrogated the use of symbolic legitimacy building methods. Drawing on a developing academic understanding of the interplay between sport and politics, this research asks: why do unrecognised states participate in 'international' sporting competitions? It adopts a fieldwork-informed qualitative single case study methodology to propose a two-part explanation. Firstly, it suggests that unrecognised states use sport to legitimate themselves internally, with the hope of fostering national identity and improving national unity. Moreover, participation in such events is seen as having external legitimacy benefits: offering an avenue for outward-oriented image-building and international engagement. The importance of sport, it seems, goes far beyond the final score.

Description

Citation

Source

ANU Student Research Conference 2016

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

DOI

Restricted until

Downloads

File
Description