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Book Chapter

Doping and Human Rights in Pariah States

Details

Citation

McArdle D (2019) Doping and Human Rights in Pariah States. In: Duval A & Rigozzi A (eds.) Yearbook of International Sports Arbitration 2017. Yearbook of International Sports Arbitration. The Hague: TMC Asser Press, pp. 29-49. https://doi.org/10.1007/15757_2019_28

Abstract
On first reading, case 2016/A/4708 Belarus Canoe Association and Belarusian Senior Men¡¯s Canoe and Kayak Team Members v International Canoe Federation, award of 23 January 2017 (hereafter BCA v ICF) raises three familiar, deceptively simple, themes in anti-doping. Namely, the potential role of national criminal authorities in doping investigations; the relationship between those authorities and international sporting stakeholders; and the importance of those stakeholders adhering to their own rules when pursuing apparent anti-doping allegations. This paper addresses those aspects in detail, but the case has a significance that goes beyond anti-doping. Specifically, BCA v ICF raises wider issues about anti-doping actors whose obligations under the WADA regime cannot be easily reconciled with their reliance on governments that use sports as a tool for cronyism and furthering political agendas. Such is the case in Belarus, where the relationship between a supposedly independent national antidoping authority and an ignoble and unhappy regime appears uncomfortably close. These concerns are compounded by sports federations who are only too happy to let Europe¡¯s last dictatorship host their international events.

Keywords
sport; human rights; Belarus; doping; tribunals; Independence

StatusPublished
Title of seriesYearbook of International Sports Arbitration
Publication date31/12/2019
Publication date online22/08/2019
URL
PublisherTMC Asser Press
Place of publicationThe Hague
ISSN of series2522-8501
ISBN978-94-6265-318-4
eISBN978-94-6265-319-1

People (1)

Dr David McArdle

Dr David McArdle

Senior Lecturer, Law

Files (1)