
Sport is often thought of as simply "games," but it can in fact be much more. Sport can be responsible for guiding social justice movements, igniting city-wide riots, uniting countries, permanently injuring youth, revolutionizing views about race, gender and class, and producing several of the most successful global industries. Reports of ethical crises in athletics are constant fodder for popular attention, whether performance enhancing drugs in baseball, corruption in college athletics, the epidemic of brain damage among NFL players, and others too numerous to mention. As a proxy for social concerns, we naturally think of sport in inherently moral terms. Yet we can hardly define the term "sport" or agree on acceptable levels of sporting risk, or determine clear roles and responsibilities for fans, players, coaches, owners, media and health care personnel. Bringing together 27 of the most essential recent articles from philosophy, history, sociology, medicine, and law, this collection explores intersections of sports and ethics and brings attention to the immense role of sports in shaping and reflecting social values.
This collection investigates the moral dimensions of athletics by examining how sport functions as a proxy for social values and ethical conflict. Editor Arthur L. Caplan compiles 27 scholarly articles from diverse disciplines including philosophy, sociology, and law to address the lack of consensus regarding the definition and regulation of sport. The text provides a framework for analyzing the responsibilities of stakeholders such as athletes, coaches, and media personnel in the face of systemic ethical crises.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this collection as a foundational resource for students and scholars interested in the intersection of ethics and athletics. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a comprehensive primer for understanding the complex moral landscape of modern sports.
Page Count:
544
Publication Date:
2016-11-24
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190210990
ISBN-13:
9780190210991
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