Articles
The Olympic System: Toward a Geopolitical Approach
• XXIII
Governments have used sport and the Olympics whenever they could because
the media sounding board allows them to convey and manipulate key images
essential to their public relations and thus to their international relations in gene-
ral. Their use of sports thus perfectly illustrates the principles of recognition and
soft power.
However, this paper would be incomplete without reporting a recent evo-
lution in the use of sport. Since the early 2000s, new actors have been out to
hijack sport for their own ends. First Greenpeace at the Sydney Games and then
Amnesty International and Reporters without Borders (RWB) at the Beijing
Games took advantage of the event to convey their own messages. These NGOs,
representing a new form of governance (?) also know how to play the PR game,
and in Beijing we saw the boycott argument reappear. For the IOC, this evolu-
tion is a new challenge because it has had to face attacks coming not from states
but from adversaries over whom it does not necessarily have a hold. Interestingly,
these adversaries simply took advantage of the IOC’s own internal contradiction:
professing universal, humanist values while holding its event in a country that
does not offer all the “guarantees” was a risky bet, but also an important one
in terms of “market share” . . . Another catastrophic factor in terms of image
for China, more than for the IOC, was the fact that the Olympic torch was run
through Europe. Here, we can only highlight the professionalism of the commu-
nication strategy of the NGOs that created the event. Incidentally, the IOC drew
its own conclusions, deciding that future Games should return to “tradition,”
that is to say, a Torch Run in the host country.
49
Pascal Gillon
Université de Franche-Comté
32 rue Mégevand – 25030 Besançon Cedex
pascal.gillon@univ-fcomte.fr
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49 Decision of the executive commission meeting in Denver in March 2009.
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