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Posts tagged sports sociology
The Culture of Football: Violence, Racism and British Society, 1968-98

By Brett Matthew Bebber

Britain enjoys a rich historical tradition of popular protest and collective action. Due to their public and publicized nature, sporting events have been recognized increasingly as venues in which broader cultural and political meanings are enacted and debated in the postwar period. This project examines how social anxieties about immigration, unemployment, and government repression were represented and contested through violence and eventually racist aggression at football matches. From 1968 to the mid-1970s, violence among fans and with police became expected on a weekly basis within and outside British football stadiums as new forms of spectator allegiance and sports consumption emerged. British football became a contested cultural and institutional site of racisms, violence, masculinities, and national mythologies. Rather than examining football per se, the principal aim of this project is to investigate how this distinct cultural milieu became a site for the British government to enact violence against working-class citizens by manipulating moral anxieties, physical environments, police tactics, and legal prosecution.

Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona, 2008. 474p.

European Convention on Spectator Violence and Misbehaviour at Sports Events and in particular at Football Matches

Under the Convention, Parties undertake to co-operate between them and encourages similar co-operation between public authorities and independent sports organisations to prevent violence and control the problem of violence and misbehaviour by spectators at sports events. To this end, it sets out a number of measures, namely: close co-operation between police forces involved; prosecution of offenders and application of appropriate penalties; strict control of ticket sales; restrictions on the sale of alcoholic drinks; appropriate design and physical fabric of stadia to prevent violence and allow effective crowd control and crowd safety. A Standing Committee established by the Convention is empowered to make recommendations to the Parties concerning measures to be taken.

European Treaty Services No.120. Strasbourg. 1985. 7p.

Committee of Inquiry into Crowd Safety and Control at Sports Grounds Final Report

Chairman: Mr Justice Popplewell

At about 7.30 pm on 29 M ay 1985, English fans charged into Block Z of the terrace at the Heysel Stadium , Brussels, shortly before the European Cup Final between Liverpool and Juventus was due to take place. There was a panic am ong the spectators in Block Z; as a result 38 people died and some 400 people were injured.

London: HMSO, 1980. 91p.