Title: Providing "intellectual guidance" for the Olympic movement : the Olympic congresses - history and highlights, 1894 - 2009 : sport studies
Abstract: The inaugural Congress of 1894 did not only result in the rebirth of the modern Games of the Olympiad as we know them today, but also ushered in policies, a philosophy and prescripts that the entire structure of the Movement (the National Committees (NOCs); the International sports Federations (IFs) and the other Organizations such as the Solidarity, Truce Commission; the World Anti-Doping Agency etc.) was to be established in subsequent years; starting with the International Committee (IOC), as the leader with supreme authority (IOC, 2011). These modern Games, of course, were a borrowed vision of Baron Pierre de Coubertin of Paris, France. Pierre de was enamoured with English games playing and visited the Much Wenlock Olympic Games in 1890 (Nauright, 2012). The latter were founded by William Penny Brookes in 1850 and more importantly, were a means to promote the physical, moral and improvement of the residents of the town and neighbourhood of Wenlock a small town in Shropshire. Professional athletes were allowed to participate in the Much Wenlock Games from 1868 and events were handicapped in 1869. Pierre de Coubertin was extremely impressed that he moved forward with an idea to revive the ancient Greek Games, organizing the first Congress in 1894, which decided, amongst other things, to hold the Games in Athens, Greece in 1896. Comparable to the Much Wenlock Games, the inaugural Congress established the Movement with the purpose to improve the human race, not only physically, but to grant bigger nobility to its spirit, in a way to strengthen the understanding and the friendship amongst town. It was viewed as extreme necessity, especially for the youth, to counteract the bad influence of industrialization. In these early days the inaugural Congress used the modern rebirth of the Games of antiquity and its adaptation to the modern times as a means to reach its higher objectives. It should be of interest to assess the extent to which how the Congresses have managed guide the IOC and the Movement over the years. This article therefore is an attempts to outline the role and impact of these Congresses on the work of the Movement, especially its intellectual guiding; modernising and transformation roles, from inception until its last edition in 2009. This review article drew its sources from the IOC official documents and publications; the Movement related publications and from the various pertinent academic and non-academic literature on the topic.
Publication Year: 2012
Publication Date: 2012-12-01
Language: en
Type: article
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