On demand video and audio
Sunday 26 November 2017 - opening day
14.00-18.00: Opening session
Chair: Henrik H. Brandt
Henrik H. Brandt: Welcome to Play the Game 2017
Wilbert Seuren: Welcome to Eindhoven
Jens Sejer Andersen: Welcome speech: Riding waves of change
Snežana Samardžić-Marković: Investing in ethical and safe sport : the international perspective
Chair: Roger Pielke
Craig Reedie: WADA - Fit for the Future
Q&A with Craig Reedie
Chair: Roger Pielke
Silke Kassner: Anti-doping & governance: Time for athletes to take destiny into their own hands
Travis Tygart: Foxes in the Hen House: Don’t Clean Athletes Deserve an Independent and Strengthened WADA?
Richard W. Pound: IOC: Which steps should be expected next?
Panel debate with Pound, Kassner and Tygart
Chair: James Corbett
James M. Dorsey: Trouble in sport's paradise: Can Qatar overcome the diplomatic crisis?
James Corbett: Introduction to Qatar 2022
Hassan Al Thawadi:
Q&A with Hassan Al Thawadi
Audio of Opening session:
Audio of part one (Brandt, Seuren, Andersen, Samardžić-Marković and Reedie)
Audio of part two (Kassner, Tygart, Pound)
Audio of part three (Corbett, Dorsey and Al Tawadi)
20.00-21.45: Main session: Sexual abuse and how to prevent it
Chair: Marjan Olfers
Karen M. Leach: A Dream Destroyed and Lives Shattered
Bettina Rulofs: VOICEs for truth and dignity - combatting sexual violence in European sport
Willem Feenstra: How journalism can cause a breakthrough in the debate on sexual abuse
Sander Roege: PSV Eindhoven and the learning process of abuse cases
Geert Slot: Why an independent inquiry into Sexual Abuse in sport in the Netherlands
George Nikolaidis: Child protection from sexual victimization in sports: recent initiatives and the role of Council of Europe
Panel debate, Q&A
20.00-21.45: Main session: National Sports Governance Observer: The first results and future perspective
Chair: Till Müller-Schoell
Arnout Geeraert: National Sports Governance Observer: How does it work and how can we share it
Frank van Eekeren: Results from the Netherlands
Aleksandra Goldys: Results from Poland
Luis Felipe Barros & Luiz Haas: Results from Brazil
Panel debate, Q&A
Monday 27 November
9.00-11.45: Plenary session: International sport on trial: Which case for the prosecution?
Video of session
Chair: Jesper Frigast Larsen
Stefano Caneppele: Understanding the risk of corruption in sport: the DACCS initiative
Arnout Geeraert: Sports governance around the world: Any sign of progress?
Jens Weinreich: Olympic crime: It runs in the family
Fabiana Schneider: The Rio 2016 investigations and the international dimension
Jean-Yves Lourgouilloux: International investigations in sport: The hurdles for the prosecutor
David Howman: What can a sports organisation achieve facing massive crime and corruption?
Francesco Ricci Bitti: Will self-regulation work - and when?
Panel debate, Q&A
11.50-13.00: Parallel session: Athletes rights and monopoly powers
Chair: Tine Rindum Teilmann
Jürgen Mittag: Towards new modes of conflict and representation? The rise of labor relations in European sport
Maximilian Seltmann: Employment Relations within the Olympic Movement: Consequences of the Monopoly Power of Organized Sport
Brendan Schwab: Embedding the human rights of athletes in world sport
Nikki Dryden: Can World Sport Embrace Human Rights?
Laura Robinson: Not Above the Law: Using Human Rights Laws to Address Abuse Allegations in Sport
Panel debate, Q&A
11.50-13.00: Partner session: Clean Athletes' Beliefs about Anti-Doping Policy Legitimacy and Support
Chair: Vassilis Barkoukis
Vassilis Barkoukis
Dmitriy Bondarev
Nenad Dikic
Dennis Dreiskämper
Andrea Petroczi
11.50-13.00: Parallel session: Sports governance: Remedies in the remit of sport
Chair: Aleksandra Goldys
Els De Waegeneer: Good Governance in International Sport Federations: the use of ethical codes
Antoine Duval: Publish or perish: The need for transparency at the Court of Arbitration for Sport
Andrew Spalding: Toward an Olympic Governance Legacy
Denis Mowbray: The Third Team: A New Model for Analysing Board Potential and Performance
Michael Pedersen: How the right organizational culture ensures the effectiveness of standards of good governance
14.15-16.00: Parallel session: Anti-doping policies: Perception and effectiveness
Chair: Paulina Tomczyk
Olivier de Hon: The effectiveness of anti-doping policies
Gerhard Treutlein: Fight against doping in the top level sport of the FRG - expression of good governance?
Joe Harris: Drug Anti-Diversion Strategies to Address Sports Anti-Doping Programs
Christina Weber: Import, seizure and analysis of prohibited substances imported into Switzerland
Matthias Kamber: Perception of Doping in Switzerland
Discussion, Q&A
14.15-16.00: Parallel session: Sports governance: Roads to government action
Chair: Frank van Eekeren
Stine Alvad and Mads Wickstrøm: Autonomy in National Olympic Committees 2017 - An autonomy index
Arnout Geeraert: Sports governance code of Flanders
Jane Purdon: The United Kingdom Code for Sports Governance
Marc Taylor: Governance change for National Governing Bodies of Sport Is this leading to the alignment of strategy and governance in England & the UK?
Oliver Dudfield: Global cooperation on sports governance: A diversity of issues across a diversity of contexts
George Paterson: Governance in Sport – what role for the EU?
Discussion, Q&A
14.15-16.00: Parallel session: Window undressing: Stories from international sport
Chair: Osasu Obayiuwana
Pål Ødegaard & Andreas Selliaas: The many questionable truths of the UEFA President
Declan Hill: The ded is dead: the Russian mob and the Sochi Games
Alessandro Oliverio: Off target: The (lifted) ban against Kuwait
Grit Hartmann: The burden of a weightlifting president
Jeppe Laursen Brock: IHF: Do member federations actually play handball?
Discussion, Q&A
16.30-18.30: Plenary session: Reform in sport: An inside job or an outside intervention?
Chair: Mogens Kirkeby
Hans-Joachim Eckert: An independent ethics committee: Can it work in sport??
David Howman: What can a sports organisation achieve facing massive crime and corruption?
Stanislas Frossard: International Partnership Against Corruption in Sport
Declan Hill: Changing The Dirty Game: how to reform the sports integrity industrial complex
Niels Nygaard: Sport must take responsibility
On the panel, Brian Cookson and Paulina Tomczyk
Discussion, Q&A
Tuesday 28 November 2017
9.00-11.45: Plenary session: Sustainable mega-events: A distant dream?
Chair: Christopher Gaffney
Harry Arne Solberg: Hosting major events: Why all the problems?
Wladimir Andreff: Alleviating the winner's curse: How to combat cost overruns in mega-sporting events
Raí Oliveira: Brazil after Rio 2016
Jules Boykoff: Anti-Olympics Activism: Protest, Politics, and the Path Ahead
Minky Worden: Moving the Ball on Human Rights and Mega-Sporting Events
Federico Addiechi: Sustainable mega-events: respecting Human Rights
11.50-13.00: Parallel session: "10 years after the White Paper: What has the EU achieved in sport?
Chair: Arnout Geeraert
Szabolcs Horvát
Judit Farkas
Mogens Kirkeby
11.50-13.00: Partner session: Transforming the Business of Pro Cycling
Chair: Joe Harris and Steve Maxwell, Session organised by The Outer Line
Steve Maxwell: Introductory statements: Transforming the Business of Pro Cycling
James Fairbank: Expanding the Role of Sponsors in Sports Governance
Joe Harris: Reinforcing Trust in Pro Cycling Through Integrity
Raymond Kerckhoffs and Stephen Farrand: The Media's Role in Pro Cycling's Future Success
Michael Carcaise: A Stronger Athletes Union to Support Greater Change in Pro Cycling
11.50-13.00: Parallel session: Kristen Worley’s Human Rights case and what it means for sport & human diversity
Chair: Andy Brown
Andy Brown
Kristen Worley
Brendan Schwab
14.15-16.00: Parallel session: Big games in small places: What is the impact?
Chair: Rasmus K. Storm
Per Ståle Knardal: Major Sports Events: The Challenges of Hosting Them Efficiently
Spencer Harris: The sport-related legacy of London 2012: Five years on
Scott Jedlicka: A Compatibility Issue: International Sporting Events and Domestic Polities, 1945-2016
Louis Moustakas: Big Games in Small Places: The African Youth Games and Capacity in Botswana
Simon Licen: Impact and Legacy of the 2013 EuroBasket in Slovenia
Igor Kováč: Sustainable mega-events: A look at some of the solutions related to organisation of the Olympic Games
14.15-16.00: Parallel session: Athletes and anti-doping: Privacy and participation
Chair: Jesper Frigast Larsen
Benjamin Bendrich: Extended Athletes’ Rights - A Necessary Power Shift in Elite Sport
Daniel Westmattelmann: Money Matters: The Impact of Prize Money on Doping Behavior – An Agent-based Analysis
Nils Zurawski & Marcel Scharf: Negotiating privacy. Athletes assessment and knowledge of the ADAMS
Paulina Tomczyk: Study of European National Anti-Doping Organizations (NADO) Reporting Practices
Marc Wonneberger: Participation of Athletes by Means of Digital Tools in the Context of Anti-Doping
Mike McNamee: Why we should not GPS tag athletes for anti doping purposes
16.30-18.30: Plenary session: Which future for antidoping - if any?
Chair: Mike McNamee
Richard H. McLaren: Flaws in the system: Insights from the IP Report
Hajo Seppelt: The duplicitous agenda in global anti-doping
Benjamin Cohen: Partnering to Change the Game
On the panel, Michele Verroken, Chiel Warner and Joseph de Pencier
16.30-18.30: Main session: Experience Eindhoven: Innovation and value creation for sports and vitality
Chair: René Wijlens
Arno Hermans: Disrupting sport: Winners and losers in the era of technology
René Wijlens: Open innovation cluster: Innovate and collaborate for physical activation of citizens
Steven Vos: Challenges and chances for use of data as driver for innovation and value creation
Harmen Bijsterbosch: Living lab Sports & Vitality Eindhoven
Victor Beerkens: Rapid Business validation
Marc van der Zande: Innovation in practice Example Case: nano4sports
19.00-22.00: Knowledge Café Sport Live (International version)
Watch a summary of the Knowledge Café (by Knowledge Centre for Sport Netherlands):
Wednesday 29 November 2017
9.00-11.45: Main session: White collar crime in professional sport
Chair: Marjan Olfers
Alex Duff: Football's Secret Trade
Jeppe Laursen Brock: Football Leaks: Tricks and taxes in the world of football
Hans Nelen: Money Laundering in professional football
Wil van Megen: Players under TPO and fundamental rights
Stefan Kesenne: On Financial Fair Play
9.00-11.45: Main session: Kazan Action Plan: Real action or words on paper?
Chair: Andreas Selliaas
Iva Glibo: The Kazan Action Plan - what makes the difference?
Alison Burchell: How Oceania uses the Kazan Action Plan
Louise Bezerra: Towards a National Sports Plan for Brazil
Mogens Kirkeby
Bob Munro: What does it take to make sport a tool for development
Lars Houbak: Involving a digital generation in sports clubs
11.50-13.00: Parallel session: Whistleblowers and journalists: The dangers of speaking up
Chair: Paulina Tomczyk
Eloy Viera Cañive: Pirates of the Caribbean. Censorship and alternative in the Cuban sports press
Kirsten Sparre: The dangers of sports journalism
Jose Luis Pérez Triviño: Whistleblowing in sport contexts: some moral and psychological problems
Jens Sejer Andersen: Mario Goijman: The failure of the world volleyball to face its past
Hajo Seppelt: The lady in red and other risks
11.50-13.00: Partner session: The elephant in the room: Prevalence of doping in elite sport
Chair: Andrea Petroczi
Hajo Seppelt
Andrea Petroczi
Daniel Westmattelmann
Olivier de Hon
Nenad Dikic
11.50-13.00: Parallel session: Sport in the global marketplace
Chair: Tine Rindum Teilmann
Lars Andersson: Globalisation, starvation wages and greedy capitalism – the real world of the sports industry
Gijsbert Oonk: Who Belongs to the Nation? Sport, Migration and Citizenship Changes
B. David Ridpath & Tim Abromeit: Expanding the National Football League to the European and Global Sports Marketplace: An Examination of Consumption and Cultural Differences
Discussion, Q&A
14.15-16.00: Parallel session: Match-fixing: Are there remedies to fix it?
Chair: Marjan Olfers
Marius Sprenger: Can we fix the Match Fixing problem? An agent-based model to fight the biggest threat to modern sports
Els De Waegeneer: Match-fixing : what makes an athlete rig a match? A study on the personal and contextual determinants of the willingness to fix a match in Football
Marjan Olfers: Monitoring systems in match-fixing
Nikolaos Theodorou: “Fix the Fixing” project: Pro-active quelling sports events manipulation
Paolo Bertaccini: Inventing an AntiMatchFixingFormula for Italy
Discussion, Q&A
14.15-16.00: Parallel session: Federations on the inside: problems and progress
Chair: Judit Farkas
Poul Broberg: How Danish sports leaders are changing the international federations from within
Kole Gjeloshaj: Inside the federations: Who has the real corruption powers?
Berit Skirstad: Norwegian Ski Federation and two doping cases: crisis management and lost reputation
Florian Petrică: Romanian Football Federation: In search of good governance
Johann Skocek & Florian Skrabal: The Businesses of the Austrian Ski Federation
Owen Evans: Corporate Cheerleaders: Major League Soccer's new breed of manufactured ultras
14.15-16.00: Partner session: Anti-doping reform: Proposals from the coal face
Chair: Joseph de Pencier, Session organised by iNADO
Joseph de Pencier: Anti-Doping Reform: Proposals from the Coal Face
Lars Mortsiefer: A new chapter - How intelligence and investigation can change the anti-doping work
Markus Seyfried: Too small to win? National Anti Doping Organizations and their fight against doping. The perspective of organizational theory
Discussion, Q&A
16.30-18.00: Plenary session: E-sport: Coming to stay - and to steal the picture?
Chair: Peter Sprenger
Ivo van Hilvoorde: eSports and ethics: the need for a research agenda
Alex Lim: Introduction to e-sports
Ian Smith: Integrity challenges in esport
Anna Baumann: Legal Challenges of the Emerging Esports Industry
Steven Vos
Panel debate, Q&A
Including conference closing:
Play the Game 2017: A reflection in the waves
Jens Sejer Andersen, Intenational director, Play the Game/Danish Institute for Sports Studies, Denmark
Play the Game Award 2017