Full Description
This book examines the prevalence of racism, xenophobia, antisemitism, and Islamophobia in European football. It provides critical assessments of selected policies, strategies, campaigns, and initiatives that have been developed by various stakeholders aimed at combating these discriminatory practices.
Bringing together leading football researchers, this book opens with a discussion of the historical context for racism, xenophobia, antisemitism, and Islamophobia in European football and outlines the key terms and core concepts that frame the study of this topic. The book then offers ten in-depth case studies of European countries, including England, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Scotland, Spain, and Sweden. Each chapter describes and analyses the various manifestations of racism, xenophobia, antisemitism, and/or Islamophobia against the specific socio-historical, demographic, political, and cultural contexts of the country before engaging with the responses of selected stakeholders. The case studies are followed by a critical account of supra-national responses, including the involvement of UEFA, the European Union, the Council of Europe, and Football Against Racism in Europe (FARE). The book is rounded off by a cross-cultural, comparative analysis drawing out the key themes that define the problem of racism and discrimination in European football today.
The most up-to-date study of one of football's most disconcerting and enduring issues, this book is fascinating reading for any student, researcher, policymaker, or practitioner with interest in the sociology of sport, football and its fan cultures, issues of inclusion and exclusion in modern societies, European football, and the relationships between sport and wider society.
Contents
1. Introduction: Key contexts, terms and nomenclature. 2. Conceptual and theoretical considerations: Racism, xenophobia, antisemitism and Islamophobia. 3. England: Islamophobia in English professional and amateur football: A blind spot. 4. France: Les Bleus and the Republic: Diversity, difference and discrimination. 5. Germany: Tensions and contradictions in football: Integration versus discrimination. 6. Italy: Racism, xenophobia, and the North-South divide in football. 7. The Netherlands: Racism and policy responses in Dutch football: A critical evaluation. 8. Poland: Nationalism, racism, xenophobia and football fan sub-cultures: Historical developments and contemporary issues. 9. Portugal: Making sense of and tackling racism in football. 10. Scotland: Sectarianism as racism in football? The cut and thrust of an ongoing debate. 11. Spain: Understanding and fighting racism in football: A story of ignorance and half-heartedness. 12. Sweden: Swedish society and football at odds with each other - So open, yet so closed. 13. Europe (I): Supranational political and policy responses to racism and discrimination in football. 14. Europe (II): Comparative observations: Commonalities and differences.