This edited book examines the promotion and protection of human rights in events, leisure and sport, as well as the emancipatory potential that is mobilised through social justice movements, activism and civil resistance in a neoliberal era. This book was originally published as a special issue of Leisure Studies.
Jayne Caudwell is an Associate Professor and Head of the Research Centre for Events, Leisure, Society and Culture in the Department of Events and Leisure at Bournemouth University, Poole, UK. Her work is related to sport and leisure cultures, gender, sexualities, and social justice.
Darragh McGee is a Lecturer in the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Bath, UK. His research interests coalesce around the politics of youth welfare, human rights, and sustainable development as they intersect with sport and leisure cultures.
Introduction - From promotion to protection: human rights and events, leisure and sport 1. Understanding the denial of abuses of human rights connected to sports mega-events 2. Politics at play: locating human rights, refugees and grassroots humanitarianism in the Calais Jungle 3. The challenge of articulating human rights at an LGBT 'mega-event': a personal reflection on Sao Paulo Pride 2017 4. Configuring human rights at EuroPride 2015 5. Rethinking human rights: the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, LGBT protections and the limits of cosmopolitanism 6. Human rights abuses at the Rio 2016 Olympics: activism and the media 7. The right to adequate housing: evictions of the homeless and the elderly caused by the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo 8. Mega-sporting events and children's rights and interests - towards a better future 9. Exploring the economic, social and cultural rights of youth leaders working in Sport for Development initiatives at grassroots level in South Africa