More
    Home Tags Olympic research journals

    Tag: Olympic research journals

    Journal of Olympic Studies, Volume 5, 2024, Number 2

    By placing scholars from various disciplines side-by-side on the common topic of the Olympic Games, JOS (available in both print and electronic format and marketed to a global scholarly audience) aims to promote and encourage a multi-disciplinary understanding of the Olympic Movement. The Forum Editorโ€™s pick from the current issue: A Basketball Height Limit? FIBA, the 1936 Olympics, and the Ruling that Saved the Game by Chad R. Carlson.

    Journal of Olympic Studies, Volume 5, 2024, Number 1

    By placing scholars from various disciplines side-by-side on the common topic of the Olympic Games, JOS (available in both print and electronic format and marketed to a global scholarly audience) aims to promote and encourage a multi-disciplinary understanding of the Olympic Movement. The Forum Editorโ€™s pick from the current issue: Bidding for the Olympic Games: An Anatomy of Arguments by Douglas Booth.

    Journal of Olympic Studies, Volume 4, 2023, Number 1

    By placing scholars from various disciplines side-by-side on the common topic of the Olympic Games, JOS (available in both print and electronic format and marketed to a global scholarly audience) aims to promote and encourage a multi-disciplinary understanding of the Olympic Movement. The Forum Editorโ€™s pick from the current issue: Viva Mexico! The Cultural Politics Behind the 1968 Mexico City Olympic Bid by Edgar Jesus Campos; Douglas Hartmann.

    Journal of Olympic Studies, Volume 3, 2022, Number 2 | The Olympic Scholarship of John J. MacAloon

    By placing scholars from various disciplines side-by-side on the common topic of the Olympic Games, JOS (available in both print and electronic format and marketed to a global scholarly audience) aims to promote and encourage a multi-disciplinary understanding of the Olympic Movement. The Forum Editorโ€™s pick from the current issue: The Professionalization of the International Olympic Committee Administration by Jean-Loup Chappelet.

    Journal of Olympic Studies, Volume 3, 2022, Number 1

    By placing scholars from various disciplines side-by-side on the common topic of the Olympic Games, JOS (available in both print and electronic format and marketed to a global scholarly audience) aims to promote and encourage a multi-disciplinary understanding of the Olympic Movement. The Forum Editorโ€™s pick from the current issue: Rethinking a Miracle: The Role of Whiteness in the 1980 Miracle on Ice by Alexandra Mountain.

    Journal of Olympic Studies, Volume 2, 2021, Number 2

    By placing scholars from various disciplines side-by-side on the common topic of the Olympic Games, JOS (available in both print and electronic format and marketed to a global scholarly audience) aims to promote and encourage a multi-disciplinary understanding of the Olympic Movement. The Forum Editorโ€™s pick from the current issue: โ€œWinning for Themselves, Not for Moscowโ€: Baltic Independence and the Olympic Games During the 1980s by Erin E. Redihan.

    Journal of Olympic Studies, Volume 2, 2021, Number 1

    By placing scholars from various disciplines side-by-side on the common topic of the Olympic Games, JOS (available in both print and electronic format and marketed to a global scholarly audience) aims to promote and encourage a multi-disciplinary understanding of the Olympic Movement. The Forum Editorโ€™s pick from the current issue: Let Them Eat Games! A Review Essay of Barry Siegelโ€™s Dreamers and Schemers by Sean Dinces.

    Journal of Olympic Studies, Volume 1, 2020, Number 2

    By placing scholars from various disciplines side-by-side on the common topic of the Olympic Games, JOS (available in both print and electronic format and marketed to a global scholarly audience) aims to promote and encourage a multi-disciplinary understanding of the Olympic Movement.The Forum Editorโ€™s pick from the current issue: SANCTIONED VIOLENCE: DEALING (WITH) DEATH IN ANCIENT GREEK ATHLETICS by David J. Lunt.

    Journal of Olympic Studies, Volume 1, 2020, Number 1

    By placing scholars from various disciplines side-by-side on the common topic of the Olympic Games, JOS (available in both print and electronic format and marketed to a global scholarly audience) aims to promote and encourage a multi-disciplinary understanding of the Olympic Movement. The Forum Editorโ€™s pick from the current issue: MILT CAMPBELL: OLYMPIC DECATHLON CHAMPION โ€œFAMOUS FOR NOT BEING FAMOUSโ€ by David K. Wiggins.

    Olimpianos โ€“ Journal of Olympic Studies, Vol 4, 2020 | Tokyo Olympic Games: postponement or cancellation?

    The purpose of Olimpianos โ€“ Journal of Olympic Studies is to provide a channel for communication and academic dissemination within Olympic and paralympic studies. The Forum Editorโ€™s pick from the current issue: POSTPONING THE TOKYO 2020 OLYMPIC GAMES: STRESS-TESTING GOVERNANCE IN THE OLYMPIC SYSTEM AND LIMITATIONS TO AGENDA 2020 by Marjorie Enya, Mateus Nagime, Dominik Gusia.
    Translate ยป