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Em um parque de estacionamento quente e empoeirado à vista da cidade velha, mas a uma distância mundial dos clubes 🤑 hedonistas das Ilhas Baleares (e villas com franja bougainvillea), Ami Mohamed-Ali senta nabrazino 777 cassinovan. pacientemente preparando o primeiro entre 🤑 três xícaraes tarde do dia para chá forte...

"O primeiro copo é amargo como a vida", diz o trabalhador sazonal de 🤑 33 anos do Sahara Ocidental, citando um velho refrão. “o segundo vidro doce e suave que se assemelha à morte”, 🤑 enquanto ajusta os fogões para campings com água líquida brazino 777 cassino forma da espuma no corpo dos copos; Mohamed-Ali pondera sobre 🤑 seus aposentoseis sem deixar vestígios das amarguradas vidas dele: E então?

"Eu realmente não gosto de reclamar porque sou um campo 🤑 para refugiados que abriga milhares e milhões", diz ele. “Além disso, estou muito melhor doque muitos dos meus compatriotas vivendo 🤑 no deserto”.

Mohamed-Ali é um dos cada vez mais moradores e trabalhadores estrangeiros, que se encontram trancados fora do mercado de 🤑 aluguel brazino 777 cassino Ibiza. Confrontados com aluguéis exorbitantes para casas apertadamente congestionadas ou compartilhadas? muitos têm pouca escolha senão viverem nas 🤑 van'as (caravanas) nem tenda...

Em Ibiza – como na vizinha Maiorca e nas ilhas Canárias - é cada vez mais óbvio 🤑 que nem a ilha, ou o seu mercado imobiliário podem suportar um grande número de turistas.

"Nos últimos cinco anos - 🤑 mas principalmente desde a pandemia – as pessoas têm sentido que tudo está saturado, há cada vez mais turistas e 🤑 isso leva à sobrecarga de estradas ou serviços públicos", diz Rafael Giménez.

"Ibiza é uma ilha, então a habitação está limitada 🤑 por definição. A lei da oferta e demanda foi totalmente quebrada."

O turismo representa 84% da economia do país e, no 🤑 ano passado 3,7 milhões de turistas visitaram Ibiza (cidade) com a pequena ilha vizinha Formentera cuja população combinada é cerca 🤑 dos 160 mil habitantes.

Giménez salienta que Prou Eivissa

O problema, diz ele o turismo excessivo é a questão que levou dezenas 🤑 de milhares para protestar nas Canárias no mês passado e por trás da manifestação centenas-fortes do Prou fora das sede 🤑 dos governos Ibiza na sexta à noite. Protesto semelhante será realizada brazino 777 cassino Maiorca neste fim

"O turismo sempre esteve aqui - 🤑 estava quando eu crescia, mas havia um equilíbrio", diz ele. “Não é como se não quiséssemos o Turismo; esse nem 🤑 tudo acontece... Mas depois que isso começa a afetarbrazino 777 cassinovida diretamente as coisas saem do controle.”

Giménez diz que casas 🤑 de férias e a proliferação dos apartamentos turísticos não são o único problema. "O fato do número maior é porque 🤑 você tem mais turistas, mas também propriedades turísticas significa precisar ter um grande volume para trabalhar brazino 777 cassino lojas ou restaurantes", 🤑 ele afirma:"Esses trabalhadores precisam ser habitados por uma explosão demográfica --não pelo facto da população estar tendo filhos; porém devido 🤑 ao turismo massivo exigir muito gente."

Hoje brazino 777 cassino dia, acrescenta ele é comum encontrar até oito pessoas compartilhando um apartamento 🤑 de três quartos e os aluguéis quase dobraram na última década – passando dos 800 ou 900 libras por mês 🤑 para pelo menos 1.500 euros --e muito mais do que isso durante o período da alta temporada.

Leonardo Nogueira, um chef 🤑 uruguaio que trocou seu apartamento de 800 libras por mês para uma autocaravana no ano passado.


brazino 777 cassino
: Patricia Escriche/The Observer

Iván Fidalgo, 🤑 um oficial civil da Guarda e coordenador local para a Associação Espanhola de Guardiões Civis s diz que Ibiza não 🤑 tem moradia acessível torna muito difícil viver os trabalhadores do setor público.

"Ninguém quer ser postado aqui", diz ele. Ninguém brazino 777 cassino 🤑 seu perfeito juízo vai querer vir morar e trabalhar no Ibiza porque não encontrará lugar para viver."

Fidalgo diz que isso 🤑 está minando a capacidade da força de fazer seu trabalho, acrescentando:

Guardias civis

Também foram forçados a soluções de habitação drásticas.

"No verão, 🤑 haverá colegas que estarão vivendo brazino 777 cassino vans ou caravanas como no ano passado e nos anos anteriores", diz ele.

Federico Faggi, 🤑 porta-voz do sindicato de inquilinos Ibiza e Formentera diz que a situação é o resultado da turismo descontrolada exacerbada pela 🤑 especulação dos fundos urubus com os recentes fluxos das nômadees digitais no norte europeu cujos altos salários permitem cobrir renda 🤑 muito além nos meios locais. Ele acrescenta: “A melhor coisa para fazer ao governo regional seria introduzir uma lei nacional 🤑 sobre habitação onde se limitava preços brazino 777 cassino áreas nas quais eles dispararam – ‘que as pessoas respirassem’. ”

No início deste 🤑 mês, Marga Prohens reconheceu a crescente raiva com o turismo não controlado. "Este governo entende que os limites são necessários", 🤑 disse ela."Temos de encontrar uma maneira para garantir coexistência entre atividade turística e bem-estar dos moradores das Ilhas Baleares".

Mariano Juan, 🤑 vice-presidente do governo de Ibiza.

consell

, diz que enquanto ele entende o mal-estar causado pela demonstração de sexta feira (sexta), não 🤑 é com turismo mas sim no ilegal. Ele afirma ainda mais: a capacidade turística licenciada por Ibiza diminuiu nas últimas 🤑 duas décadas desde cerca 109.000 camas até pouco menos do 100.000 quando hotéis menores fecharam ou reduzirembrazino 777 cassinocontagem para 🤑 se concentrar na qualidade e brazino 777 cassino vez da quantidade;

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"Se a associação que organiza 🤑 o protesto está sugerindo... cortar os lugares turísticos legais, então talvez não estejamos chegando à raiz do problema -- mercado 🤑 ilegal", diz ele. “São milhares de anúncios no Airbnb e centenas na Booking s tudo isso se engrossa porque as 🤑 redes sociais tornaram mais fácil encontrar acomodação ilícita”.

A chave para combater a saturação turística, acrescenta ele é "uma luta até 🤑 à morte contra o turismo ilegal". Para esse fim diz que os governos de Ibiza têm reprimido proprietários ilegais e 🤑 podem ser multados brazino 777 cassino 40.000 apenas por anunciar um arrendamento ilícito. Juan disse:

consell

já havia cobrado multas totalizando mais de 🤑 2m e tem quase 200 casos abertos contra apartamentos turísticos ilegais brazino 777 cassino diferentes plataformas. Enquanto isso, está trabalhando com 🤑 pessoas como o Airbnb para erradicar proprietários ilegales ou usar inspetoras do conselho fazer reservas secretas;

Juan também aponta que medidas 🤑 para limitar o número de carros chegando à ilha por ferry serão discutidas no parlamento regional nos próximos meses, e 🤑 diz as autoridades têm trabalhado duro brazino 777 cassino atrair diferentes tipos.

"Por muitos anos, o

consell

Tem trabalhado para promover o turismo familiar, esportivo 🤑 e gastronômico", acrescenta. "Cinco ou 10 anos atrás sonhei brazino 777 cassino ter uma temporada turística que durou cinco meses - não 🤑 apenas três semanas de sol com festas." Agora estamos recebendo um período turístico... então já conseguimos mudar a modalidade do 🤑 turista".

Ami Mohamed-Ali, do Sahara Ocidental derrama chá nabrazino 777 cassinocarrinha.


brazino 777 cassino
: Patricia Escriche/The Observer

Enquanto isso, os parques de estacionamento e acampamentos 🤑 da ilha estão brincando brazino 777 cassino casa para o sem-teto tijolo/morta. Dada a tensão financeira ou emocional dos apartamentos apertado compartilhamento 🤑 (apertados), alguns chegaram até mesmo à liberdade do lar móvel...

Leonardo Nogueira, um chef uruguaio de 45 anos que cozinha brazino 777 cassino 🤑 villas particulares trocou seu apartamento com uma cama e 800 libras por mês para a caravana Fiat no ano passado. 🤑 Até agora ele não se arrepende nem tem espaço suficiente pra o conforto essencial das criaturas:brazino 777 cassinocafeteira;

yrba matease

, guitarras 🤑 e prancha de surf.

"Encontrar um lugar para morar aqui é problema real", diz ele. “Conheço casais que se separaram, mas 🤑 têm de continuar vivendo juntos – uma no sofá e outra na cama - porque não tem mais nenhum outro 🤑 local a onde ir... Aqui tenho painéis solares eletricidade ou aquecimento; sou autossuficiente agora mesmo”.

Da mesma forma flegmático é 🤑 Felipe Keilis-Carrasco, um músico da Argentina que toca clubes clubes e bares combrazino 777 cassinobanda de cumbia. Tendo deixado para 🤑 trás o mercado do aluguel a casa agora está uma caravana velha ele comprou por 2.000 libras esterlinaS

"Não acho que 🤑 seja tão ruim", diz ele. Não é uma casa nas montanhas; não o lugar mais luxuoso, mas brazino 777 cassino comparação com 🤑 as condições de alguns trabalhadores sazonais - um quarto minúsculo e horrível – está tudo bem? E melhor do Que 🤑 gastar 700 libras por mês num local compartilhado entre 10 outras pessoas

Um senso de espírito comunitário é evidente na forma 🤑 como os moradores do estacionamento se cumprimentam quando chegam brazino 777 cassino casa a partir da longa jornada e no modo que 🤑 Mohamed-Ali fez amizade com marroquinos, cozinhando para eles não precisa sobreviver aos sanduíche. A maioria também está unida por preocupações 🤑 sobre ser multado pela polícia ou até mesmo mudar o local onde estão indo?

Tal equanimidade, no entanto não é universal. 🤑 Um homem romeno que pede para ser nomeado passou agora dois de seus 10 anos brazino 777 cassino Ibiza vivendo numa caravana: 🤑 "As coisas vão mudar; elas só piorarão", diz ele."Esta ilha está destinada a pessoas ricas".

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    Forms of competitive activity, usually physical

    The 2005 London Marathon: running races, in their various specialties, represent the oldest and most ♣️ traditional form of sport.

    Sport pertains to any form of physical activity or game,[1] often competitive and organized, that aims to ♣️ use, maintain, or improve physical ability and skills while providing enjoyment to participants and, in some cases, entertainment to spectators.

    [2] ♣️ Sports can, through casual or organized participation, improve participants' physical health.

    Hundreds of sports exist, from those between single contestants, through ♣️ to those with hundreds of simultaneous participants, either in teams or competing as individuals.

    In certain sports such as racing, many ♣️ contestants may compete, simultaneously or consecutively, with one winner; in others, the contest (a match) is between two sides, each ♣️ attempting to exceed the other.

    Some sports allow a "tie" or "draw", in which there is no single winner; others provide ♣️ tie-breaking methods to ensure one winner and one loser.

    A number of contests may be arranged in a tournament producing a ♣️ champion.

    Many sports leagues make an annual champion by arranging games in a regular sports season, followed in some cases by ♣️ playoffs.

    Sport is generally recognised as system of activities based in physical athleticism or physical dexterity, with major competitions such as ♣️ the Olympic Games admitting only sports meeting this definition.

    [3] Other organisations, such as the Council of Europe, preclude activities without ♣️ a physical element from classification as sports.

    [2] However, a number of competitive, but non-physical, activities claim recognition as mind sports.

    The ♣️ International Olympic Committee (through ARISF) recognises both chess and bridge as bona fide sports, and SportAccord, the international sports federation ♣️ association, recognises five non-physical sports: bridge, chess, draughts (checkers), Go and xiangqi,[4][5] and limits the number of mind games which ♣️ can be admitted as sports.[1]

    Sport is usually governed by a set of rules or customs, which serve to ensure fair ♣️ competition, and allow consistent adjudication of the winner.

    Winning can be determined by physical events such as scoring goals or crossing ♣️ a line first.

    It can also be determined by judges who are scoring elements of the sporting performance, including objective or ♣️ subjective measures such as technical performance or artistic impression.

    Records of performance are often kept, and for popular sports, this information ♣️ may be widely announced or reported in sport news.

    Sport is also a major source of entertainment for non-participants, with spectator ♣️ sport drawing large crowds to sport venues, and reaching wider audiences through broadcasting.

    Sport betting is in some cases severely regulated, ♣️ and in some cases is central to the sport.According to A.T.

    Kearney, a consultancy, the global sporting industry is worth up ♣️ to $620 billion as of 2013.

    [6] The world's most accessible and practised sport is running, while association football is the ♣️ most popular spectator sport.

    [7]Meaning and usageEtymology

    The word "sport" comes from the Old French desport meaning "leisure", with the oldest definition ♣️ in English from around 1300 being "anything humans find amusing or entertaining".[8]

    Other meanings include gambling and events staged for the ♣️ purpose of gambling; hunting; and games and diversions, including ones that require exercise.

    [9] Roget's defines the noun sport as an ♣️ "activity engaged in for relaxation and amusement" with synonyms including diversion and recreation.[10]Nomenclature

    The singular term "sport" is used in most ♣️ English dialects to describe the overall concept (e.g.

    "children taking part in sport"), with "sports" used to describe multiple activities (e.g.

    "football ♣️ and rugby are the most popular sports in England").

    American English uses "sports" for both terms.

    Definition

    The International Olympic Committee recognises some ♣️ board games as sports including chess.

    The precise definition of what differentiates a sport from other leisure activities varies between sources.

    The ♣️ closest to an international agreement on a definition is provided by the Global Association of International Sports Federations (GAISF), which ♣️ is the association for all the largest international sports federations (including association football, athletics, cycling, tennis, equestrian sports, and more), ♣️ and is therefore the de facto representative of international sport.

    GAISF uses the following criteria, determining that a sport should:[1]

    have an ♣️ element of competition

    be in no way harmful to any living creature

    not rely on equipment provided by a single supplier (excluding ♣️ proprietary games such as arena football)

    not rely on any "luck" element specifically designed into the sport.

    They also recognise that sport ♣️ can be primarily physical (such as rugby or athletics), primarily mind (such as chess or Go), predominantly motorised (such as ♣️ Formula 1 or powerboating), primarily co-ordination (such as billiard sports), or primarily animal-supported (such as equestrian sport).[1]

    The inclusion of mind ♣️ sports within sport definitions has not been universally accepted, leading to legal challenges from governing bodies in regards to being ♣️ denied funding available to sports.

    [11] Whilst GAISF recognises a small number of mind sports, it is not open to admitting ♣️ any further mind sports.

    There has been an increase in the application of the term "sport" to a wider set of ♣️ non-physical challenges such as video games, also called esports (from "electronic sports"), especially due to the large scale of participation ♣️ and organised competition, but these are not widely recognised by mainstream sports organisations.

    According to Council of Europe, European Sports Charter, ♣️ article 2.

    i, "'Sport' means all forms of physical activity which, through casual or organised participation, aim at expressing or improving ♣️ physical fitness and mental well-being, forming social relationships or obtaining results in competition at all levels.

    "[12]CompetitionHorse racing

    There are opposing views ♣️ on the necessity of competition as a defining element of a sport, with almost all professional sports involving competition, and ♣️ governing bodies requiring competition as a prerequisite of recognition by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) or GAISF.[1]

    Other bodies advocate widening ♣️ the definition of sport to include all physical activity.

    For instance, the Council of Europe include all forms of physical exercise, ♣️ including those competed just for fun.

    In order to widen participation, and reduce the impact of losing on less able participants, ♣️ there has been an introduction of non-competitive physical activity to traditionally competitive events such as school sports days, although moves ♣️ like this are often controversial.[13][14]

    In competitive events, participants are graded or classified based on their "result" and often divided into ♣️ groups of comparable performance, (e.g.

    gender, weight and age).

    The measurement of the result may be objective or subjective, and corrected with ♣️ "handicaps" or penalties.

    In a race, for example, the time to complete the course is an objective measurement.

    In gymnastics or diving ♣️ the result is decided by a panel of judges, and therefore subjective.

    There are many shades of judging between boxing and ♣️ mixed martial arts, where victory is assigned by judges if neither competitor has lost at the end of the match ♣️ time.

    History

    Roman bronze reduction of Myron's Discobolos, 2nd century AD

    Swimmers perform squats as warm-up exercise prior to entering the pool in ♣️ a U.S.

    military base, 2011.

    Artifacts and structures suggest sport in China as early as 2000 BC.

    [15] Gymnastics appears to have been ♣️ popular in China's ancient past.

    Monuments to the Pharaohs indicate that a number of sports, including swimming and fishing, were well-developed ♣️ and regulated several thousands of years ago in ancient Egypt.

    [16] Other Egyptian sports included javelin throwing, high jump, and wrestling.

    Ancient ♣️ Persian sports such as the traditional Iranian martial art of Zoorkhaneh had a close connection to warfare skills.

    [17] Among other ♣️ sports that originated in ancient Persia are polo and jousting.

    The traditional South Asian sport of kabaddi has been played for ♣️ thousands of years, potentially as a preparation for hunting.[18]

    Motorised sports have appeared since the advent of the modern age.

    A wide ♣️ range of sports were already established by the time of Ancient Greece and the military culture and the development of ♣️ sport in Greece influenced one another considerably.

    Sport became such a prominent part of their culture that the Greeks created the ♣️ Olympic Games, which in ancient times were held every four years in a small village in the Peloponnesus called Olympia.[19]

    Sports ♣️ have been increasingly organised and regulated from the time of the ancient Olympics up to the present century.

    Industrialisation has brought ♣️ motorised transportation and increased leisure time, letting people attend and follow spectator sports and participate in athletic activities.

    These trends continued ♣️ with the advent of mass media and global communication.

    Professionalism became prevalent, further adding to the increase in sport's popularity, as ♣️ sports fans followed the exploits of professional athletes – all while enjoying the exercise and competition associated with amateur participation ♣️ in sports.

    Since the turn of the 21st century, there has been increasing debate about whether transgender sports people should be ♣️ able to participate in sport events that conform with their post-transition gender identity.

    [20]Fair playSportsmanship

    Sportsmanship is an attitude that strives for ♣️ fair play, courtesy toward teammates and opponents, ethical behaviour and integrity, and grace in victory or defeat.[21][22][23]

    Sportsmanship expresses an aspiration ♣️ or ethos that the activity will be enjoyed for its own sake.

    The well-known sentiment by sports journalist Grantland Rice, that ♣️ it is "not that you won or lost but how you played the game", and the modern Olympic creed expressed ♣️ by its founder Pierre de Coubertin: "The most important thing...

    is not winning but taking part" are typical expressions of this ♣️ sentiment.

    Cheating

    Key principles of sport include that the result should not be predetermined, and that both sides should have equal opportunity ♣️ to win.

    Rules are in place to ensure fair play, but participants can break these rules in order to gain advantage.

    Participants ♣️ may cheat in order to unfairly increase their chance of winning, or in order to achieve other advantages such as ♣️ financial gains.

    The widespread existence of gambling on the results of sports events creates a motivation for match fixing, where a ♣️ participant or participants deliberately work to ensure a given outcome rather than simply playing to win.

    Doping and drugs

    The competitive nature ♣️ of sport encourages some participants to attempt to enhance their performance through the use of medicines, or through other means ♣️ such as increasing the volume of blood in their bodies through artificial means.

    All sports recognised by the IOC or SportAccord ♣️ are required to implement a testing programme, looking for a list of banned drugs, with suspensions or bans being placed ♣️ on participants who test positive for banned substances.

    Violence

    Violence in sports involves crossing the line between fair competition and intentional aggressive ♣️ violence.

    Athletes, coaches, fans, and parents sometimes unleash violent behaviour on people or property, in misguided shows of loyalty, dominance, anger, ♣️ or celebration.

    Rioting or hooliganism by fans in particular is a problem at some national and international sporting contests.

    [citation needed]Participation

    Gender participation

    International ♣️ level female athletes at ISTAF Berlin, 2006

    Female participation in sports continues to rise alongside the opportunity for involvement and the ♣️ value of sports for child development and physical fitness.

    Despite increases in female participation during the last three decades, a gap ♣️ persists in the enrolment figures between male and female players in sports-related teams.

    Female players account for 39% of the total ♣️ participation in US interscholastic athletics.

    Certain sports are mixed-gender, allowing (or even requiring) men and women to play on the same ♣️ team.

    One example of this is Baseball5, which is the first mixed-gender sport to have been admitted into an Olympic event.

    [24]Youth ♣️ participation

    Youth sport presents children with opportunities for fun, socialisation, forming peer relationships, physical fitness, and athletic scholarships.

    Activists for education and ♣️ the war on drugs encourage youth sport as a means to increase educational participation and to fight the illegal drug ♣️ trade.

    According to the Center for Injury Research and Policy at Nationwide Children's Hospital, the biggest risk for youth sport is ♣️ death or serious injury including concussion.

    These risks come from running, basketball, association football, volleyball, gridiron, gymnastics, and ice hockey.

    [25] Youth ♣️ sport in the US is a $15 billion industry including equipment up to private coaching.[26]

    Disabled participation

    A runner gives a friendly ♣️ tap on the shoulder to a wheelchair racer during the Marathon International de Paris (Paris Marathon) in 2014.

    Disabled sports also ♣️ adaptive sports or parasports, are sports played by people with a disability, including physical and intellectual disabilities.

    As many of these ♣️ are based on existing sports modified to meet the needs of people with a disability, they are sometimes referred to ♣️ as adapted sports.

    However, not all disabled sports are adapted; several sports that have been specifically created for people with a ♣️ disability have no equivalent in able-bodied sports.

    Spectator involvement

    Spectators at the 1906 unofficial Olympic Games

    The competition element of sport, along with ♣️ the aesthetic appeal of some sports, result in the popularity of people attending to watch sport being played.

    This has led ♣️ to the specific phenomenon of spectator sport.

    Both amateur and professional sports attract spectators, both in person at the sport venue, ♣️ and through broadcast media including radio, television and internet broadcast.

    Both attendance in person and viewing remotely can incur a sometimes ♣️ substantial charge, such as an entrance ticket, or pay-per-view television broadcast.

    Sports league and tournament are two common arrangements to organise ♣️ sport teams or individual athletes into competing against each other continuously or periodically.

    It is common for popular sports to attract ♣️ large broadcast audiences, leading to rival broadcasters bidding large amounts of money for the rights to show certain events.

    The football ♣️ World Cup attracts a global television audience of hundreds of millions; the 2006 final alone attracted an estimated worldwide audience ♣️ of well over 700 million and the 2011 Cricket World Cup Final attracted an estimated audience of 135 million in ♣️ India alone.[27]

    In the United States, the championship game of the NFL, the Super Bowl, has become one of the most ♣️ watched television broadcasts of the year.

    [28][29] Super Bowl Sunday is a de facto national holiday in America;[30][31] the viewership being ♣️ so great that in 2015, advertising space was reported as being sold at $4.

    5m for a 30-second slot.[28]

    Amateur and professional

    Women's ♣️ volleyball team of a U.S.university

    Sport can be undertaken on an amateur, professional or semi-professional basis, depending on whether participants are ♣️ incentivised for participation (usually through payment of a wage or salary).

    Amateur participation in sport at lower levels is often called ♣️ "grassroots sport".[2][32]

    The popularity of spectator sport as a recreation for non-participants has led to sport becoming a major business in ♣️ its own right, and this has incentivised a high paying professional sport culture, where high performing participants are rewarded with ♣️ pay far in excess of average wages, which can run into millions of dollars.[33]

    Some sports, or individual competitions within a ♣️ sport, retain a policy of allowing only amateur sport.

    The Olympic Games started with a principle of amateur competition with those ♣️ who practised a sport professionally considered to have an unfair advantage over those who practised it merely as a hobby.

    [34] ♣️ From 1971, Olympic athletes were allowed to receive compensation and sponsorship,[35] and from 1986, the IOC decided to make all ♣️ professional athletes eligible for the Olympics,[35][36] with the exceptions of boxing,[37][38] and wrestling.[39][40]Technology

    These lights at the Melbourne Cricket Ground indicate ♣️ the decision the third umpire makes following a review.

    Technology plays an important part in modern sport.

    It is a necessary part ♣️ of some sports (such as motorsport), and it is used in others to improve performance.

    Some sports also use it to ♣️ allow off-field decision making.

    Sports science is a widespread academic discipline, and can be applied to areas including athlete performance, such ♣️ as the use of video analysis to fine-tune technique, or to equipment, such as improved running shoes or competitive swimwear.

    Sports ♣️ engineering emerged as a discipline in 1998 with an increasing focus not just on materials design but also the use ♣️ of technology in sport, from analytics and big data to wearable technology.

    [41] In order to control the impact of technology ♣️ on fair play, governing bodies frequently have specific rules that are set to control the impact of technical advantage between ♣️ participants.

    For example, in 2010, full-body, non-textile swimsuits were banned by FINA, as they were enhancing swimmers' performances.[42][43]

    The increase in technology ♣️ has also allowed many decisions in sports matches to be taken, or reviewed, off-field, with another official using instant replays ♣️ to make decisions.

    In some sports, players can now challenge decisions made by officials.

    In Association football, goal-line technology makes decisions on ♣️ whether a ball has crossed the goal line or not.

    [44] The technology is not compulsory,[45] but was used in the ♣️ 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil,[46] and the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup in Canada,[47] as well as in the ♣️ Premier League from 2013–14,[48] and the Bundesliga from 2015–16.

    [49] In the NFL, a referee can ask for a review from ♣️ the replay booth, or a head coach can issue a challenge to review the play using replays.

    The final decision rests ♣️ with the referee.

    [50] A video referee (commonly known as a Television Match Official or TMO) can also use replays to ♣️ help decision-making in rugby (both league and union).

    [51][52] In international cricket, an umpire can ask the Third umpire for a ♣️ decision, and the third umpire makes the final decision.

    [53][54] Since 2008, a decision review system for players to review decisions ♣️ has been introduced and used in ICC-run tournaments, and optionally in other matches.

    [53][55] Depending on the host broadcaster, a number ♣️ of different technologies are used during an umpire or player review, including instant replays, Hawk-Eye, Hot Spot and Real Time ♣️ Snickometer.

    [56][57] Hawk-Eye is also used in tennis to challenge umpiring decisions.[58][59]

    Sports and education

    Research suggests that sports have the capacity to ♣️ connect youth to positive adult role models and provide positive development opportunities, as well as promote the learning and application ♣️ of life skills.

    [60][61] In recent years the use of sport to reduce crime, as well as to prevent violent extremism ♣️ and radicalization, has become more widespread, especially as a tool to improve self-esteem, enhance social bonds and provide participants with ♣️ a feeling of purpose.[61]

    There is no high-quality evidence that shows the effectiveness of interventions to increase sports participation of the ♣️ community in sports such as mass media campaigns, educational sessions, and policy changes.

    [62] There is also no high-quality studies that ♣️ investigate the effect of such interventions in promoting healthy behaviour change in the community.[63]Politics

    Benito Mussolini used the 1934 FIFA World ♣️ Cup, which was held in Italy, to showcase Fascist Italy.

    [64][65] Adolf Hitler also used the 1936 Summer Olympics held in ♣️ Berlin, and the 1936 Winter Olympics held in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, to promote the Nazi ideology of the superiority of the Aryan ♣️ race, and inferiority of the Jews and other "undesirables".

    [65][66] Germany used the Olympics to give off a peaceful image while ♣️ secretly preparing for war.[67]

    When apartheid was the official policy in South Africa, many sports people, particularly in rugby union, adopted ♣️ the conscientious approach that they should not appear in competitive sports there.

    Some feel this was an effective contribution to the ♣️ eventual demolition of the policy of apartheid, others feel that it may have prolonged and reinforced its worst effects.[68]

    In the ♣️ history of Ireland, Gaelic sports were connected with cultural nationalism.

    Until the mid-20th century a person could have been banned from ♣️ playing Gaelic football, hurling, or other sports administered by the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) if she/he played or supported Association ♣️ football, or other games seen to be of British origin.

    Until recently the GAA continued to ban the playing of football ♣️ and rugby union at Gaelic venues.

    This ban, also known as Rule 42,[69] is still enforced, but was modified to allow ♣️ football and rugby to be played in Croke Park while Lansdowne Road was redeveloped into Aviva Stadium.

    Until recently, under Rule ♣️ 21, the GAA also banned members of the British security forces and members of the RUC from playing Gaelic games, ♣️ but the advent of the Good Friday Agreement in 1998 led to the eventual removal of the ban.[70]

    Nationalism is often ♣️ evident in the pursuit of sport, or in its reporting: people compete in national teams, or commentators and audiences can ♣️ adopt a partisan view.

    On occasion, such tensions can lead to violent confrontation among players or spectators within and beyond the ♣️ sporting venue, as in the Football War.

    These trends are seen by many as contrary to the fundamental ethos of sport ♣️ being carried on for its own sake and for the enjoyment of its participants.

    Sport and politics collided in the 1972 ♣️ Olympics in Munich.

    Masked men entered the hotel of the Israeli Olympic team and killed many of their men.

    This was known ♣️ as the Munich massacre.

    A study of US elections has shown that the result of sports events can affect the results.

    A ♣️ study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences showed that when the home team wins the game ♣️ before the election, the incumbent candidates can increase their share of the vote by 1.5 per cent.

    A loss had the ♣️ opposite effect, and the effect is greater for higher-profile teams or unexpected wins and losses.

    [71] Also, when Washington Redskins win ♣️ their final game before an election, then the incumbent President is more likely to win, and if the Redskins lose, ♣️ then the opposition candidate is more likely to win; this has become known as the Redskins Rule.[72][73]

    As a means of ♣️ controlling and subduing populations

    Étienne de La Boétie, in his essay Discourse on Voluntary Servitude describes athletic spectacles as means for ♣️ tyrants to control their subjects by distracting them.

    Do not imagine that there is any bird more easily caught by decoy, ♣️ nor any fish sooner fixed on the hook by wormy bait, than are all these poor fools neatly tricked into ♣️ servitude by the slightest feather passed, so to speak, before their mouths.

    Truly it is a marvellous thing that they let ♣️ themselves be caught so quickly at the slightest tickling of their fancy.

    Plays, farces, spectacles, gladiators, strange beasts, medals, pictures, and ♣️ other such opiates, these were for ancient peoples the bait toward slavery, the price of their liberty, the instruments of ♣️ tyranny.

    By these practices and enticements the ancient dictators so successfully lulled their subjects under the yoke, that the stupefied peoples, ♣️ fascinated by the pastimes and vain pleasures flashed before their eyes, learned subservience as naïvely, but not so creditably, as ♣️ little children learn to read by looking at bright picture books.[74]

    During the British rule of Bengal, British and European sports ♣️ began to supplant traditional Bengali sports, resulting in a loss of native culture.

    [75][76]Religious views

    The foot race was one of the ♣️ events dedicated to Zeus.

    Panathenaic amphora, Kleophrades painter, c.

    500 BC , Louvre museum.

    Sport was an important form of worship in Ancient ♣️ Greek religion.

    The ancient Olympic Games were held in honour of the head deity, Zeus, and featured various forms of religious ♣️ dedication to him and other gods.

    [77] As many Greeks travelled to see the games, this combination of religion and sport ♣️ also served as a way of uniting them.

    The practice of athletic competitions has been criticised by some Christian thinkers as ♣️ a form of idolatry, in which "human beings extol themselves, adore themselves, sacrifice themselves and reward themselves.

    "[78] Sports are seen ♣️ by these critics as a manifestation of "collective pride" and "national self-deification" in which feats of human power are idolised ♣️ at the expense of divine worship.[78]

    Tertullian condemns the athletic performances of his day, insisting "the entire apparatus of the shows ♣️ is based upon idolatry.

    "[79] The shows, says Tertullian, excite passions foreign to the calm temperament cultivated by the Christian:

    God has ♣️ enjoined us to deal calmly, gently, quietly, and peacefully with the Holy Spirit, because these things are alone in keeping ♣️ with the goodness of His nature, with His tenderness and sensitiveness....

    Well, how shall this be made to accord with the ♣️ shows? For the show always leads to spiritual agitation, since where there is pleasure, there is keenness of feeling giving ♣️ pleasure its zest; and where there is keenness of feeling, there is rivalry giving in turn its zest to that.

    Then, ♣️ too, where you have rivalry, you have rage, bitterness, wrath and grief, with all bad things which flow from them ♣️ – the whole entirely out of keeping with the religion of Christ.[80]

    Christian clerics in the Wesleyan-Holiness movement oppose the viewing ♣️ of or participation in professional sports, believing that professional sports leagues profane the Sabbath as in the modern era, certain ♣️ associations hold games on the Lord's Day.

    [81] They also criticise professional sports for its fostering of a commitment that competes ♣️ with a Christian's primary commitment to God in opposition to 1 Corinthians 7:35, what they perceive to be a lack ♣️ of modesty in the players' and cheerleaders' uniforms (which are not in conformity with the Methodistic doctrine of outward holiness), ♣️ its association with violence in opposition to Hebrews 7:26, what they perceive to be the extensive use of profanity among ♣️ many players that contravenes Colossians 3:8–10, and the frequent presence of gambling, as well as alcohol and other drugs at ♣️ sporting events, which go against a commitment to teetotalism.[81]Popularity

    Popularity in 2018 of major sports by size of fan base:[7]See alsoRelated ♣️ topicsSources

    This article incorporates text from a free content work.

    Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO.

    Text taken from Strengthening the rule of ♣️ law through education: a guide for policymakers​, UNESCO, UNESCO.UNESCO.

    To learn how to add open license text to Wikipedia articles, please ♣️ see this how-to page.

    For information on reusing text from Wikipedia, please see the terms of use.

    ReferencesSources

    European Commission (2007), The White ♣️ Paper on Sport ..

    Council of Europe (2001), The European sport charter.

    Further reading

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