1st Edition

The War on Drugs in Sport Moral Panics and Organizational Legitimacy

By Vanessa McDermott Copyright 2016
    290 Pages
    by Routledge

    290 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book is an innovative and compelling work that develops a modified moral panic model illustrated by the drugs in sport debate. Drawing on Max Weber’s work on moral authority and legitimacy, McDermott argues that doping scandals create a crisis of legitimacy for sport governing bodies and other elite groups. This crisis leads to a moral panic, where the issue at stake for elite groups is perceptions of their organizational legitimacy. The book highlights the role of the media as a site where claims to legitimacy are made, and contested, contributing to the social construction of a moral panic. The book explores the way regulatory responses, in this case anti-doping policies in sport, reflect the interests of elite groups and the impact of those responses on individuals, or "folk devils." The War on Drugs in Sport makes a key contribution to moral panic theory by adapting Goode and Ben-Yehuda’s moral panic model to capture the diversity of interests and complex relationships between elite groups. The difference between this book and others in the field is its application of a new theoretical perspective, supported by well-researched empirical evidence.

    Introduction  1. Locating Legitimacy and Moral Panics  2. Historical Overview: The International Olympic Committee, Legitimacy and Doping  3. The World Anti-Doping Agency: Legitimacy and a Moral Panic  4. The Australian Football League: Legitimating the War on Drugs in Sport  5. Mediating Legitimacy and Moral Panics  6. Legitimacy, Doping and the Grassroots Sporting Community.  Conclusion.  Appendix 6.1: Interview Research Methodology.  Appendix 6.2: Interview Participants: NSOs, Information & Education (n=28).

    Biography

    Vanessa McDermott is a Research Fellow at RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia.