The IOC and the doping issue - An institutional discursive approach to organizational identity construction

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To show why the 1998 doping scandals led to the establishment of the World Anti-Doping Agency, this paper investigates how the IOC has created its organizational identity once confronted with the emergence of doping in sport. The paper endorses a new institutional understanding of organizations, which is combined with a critical discourse analytical framework. Through a systematic reading of the Olympic Review between 1960 and 2003 four main anti-doping discourses are outlined: health scientific, ethical, legal and educational discourses construct the meaning-providing horizon of IOC anti-doping commitment. The 1988 Ben Johnson doping incident is crucial for the understanding of the organizational changes occurring 10 years later. Immediately following the Seoul Olympic Games the IOC applies a warfare genre, which frames anti-doping as a declaration of war and constructs a narrative of the IOC as leading a successful battle against doping. The 1998 doping scandals reveal the opposite. Subsequently, WADA can be labelled IOC's institutionalization failure.

Original languageEnglish
JournalSport Management Review
Volume17
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)160-173
Number of pages14
ISSN1441-3523
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014
Externally publishedYes

    Research areas

  • Critical discourse analysis, Genre, Metaphors, New institutionalism, Warfare, World Anti-Doping Agency, WADA

ID: 254659137