SPORTS

How Sports Policies Reflect Society's Values

Fri Nov 07 2025

Beyond the Games

Sports are more than just games. They mirror the values and beliefs of societies. A recent study dug into how different cultures and religions shape the impact of sports policies. The focus was on two main goals: national pride and social cohesion.

The Study

The study looked at data from 1994 to 2024. It measured success through Olympic medals. Two types of policies were examined:

  • One for social cohesion
  • Another for national pride

The research considered both individual and collective factors.

Key Findings

Social Cohesion

  • Communitarian religions (emphasizing community over individualism) aligned better with policies aimed at social cohesion.
  • Individualistic religions showed less alignment with these policies.

National Pride

  • The type of religion didn't seem to matter.
  • Secular approaches to the body (focusing less on the mind) aligned better with policies at an individual level.

Philosophical Views

The study also looked at different philosophical views on the body:

  • Policies aimed at social cohesion worked well with the ideas of Deleuze, Heidegger, and Descartes.
  • They clashed with Husserl's views.

Economic Factors

Income levels and inequality were also considered:

  • The study used GDP and the Gini index to depict different social contexts.
  • Country-specific factors were taken into account to represent historical and institutional differences.

Conclusion

In short, the study shows that sports policies are not one-size-fits-all. They are influenced by a complex mix of cultural, religious, and philosophical factors. This highlights the need for tailored approaches in sports policy-making.

questions

    How do the findings of this study align with the widely accepted notion that sports serve as a universal unifier regardless of cultural or religious backgrounds?
    To what extent can the results of this study be generalized to non-Olympic sports or other international sporting events?
    Could the emphasis on certain religious and secular ethics in sports policies be a deliberate strategy to influence global religious demographics?

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