Football is Politics

Football is Politics

From ultras to oligarchs: as the World Cup in North America kicks off, we explore the politics of football. How the game is used and abused as a tool of power and prestige, but also functions as a stage for resistance and representation.

Football and politics go hand in hand. That became clear once again this past year when FIFA presented a ‘Peace Prize’ to U.S. President Donald Trump for his ‘exceptional and extraordinary actions for peace’: corruption captured in a single image.

But football is not just the billion-dollar business of oligarchs and sheikhs. The politics of football can also be seen in the demonstrations against Turkish President Erdoğan led by supporters of Beşiktaş J.K., the role of Cairo hooligans from Al Ahly SC during the Arab Spring or in the Irish national football team as symbol of Irish independence.

During this programme, we explore the football pitch as a stage for resistance and representation. How do governments use the game to project power and prestige? Where do players, fans, and activists push back, and how does football relate to anti-colonial struggles past and present? What does the World Cup reveal about the relationship between sport, nation states, and resistance today?

About the speakers

James Montague is an award-winning author and journalist who writes for The Athletic and Tifo and who reports about football, politics and society for The New York Times, CNN and BBC World Service. He is the author of several books, including Among the Ultras, in which Montague went undercover with hooligan groups worldwide.

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