Sporting contests have provided mass entertainment throughout
history, and today generate revenues of approximately $200 billion
annually in the US alone. Like in the entertainment industry, the
modern sports industry s revenues are based on the entertainment
value of output and more entertaining sporting contests imply
greater game-day attendance, television revenues and sales of
merchandise. Research by economists has attempted to understand and
explain behavior as it relates to sporting contests, showing that
standard microeconomic theory used to explain consumer and producer
behavior can also be applied to the behavior of fans, team owners,
league executives and players. One commonality among many ancient
and modern sports is the existence of violence and aggression in
contests. Compare, for example, a modern NASCAR race with a Roman
chariot race: Only the technology has changed. From the perspective
of an economist, violence in sporting contests is an outcome of the
forces of supply and demand, and the phenomenon exists because fans
respond to it. Spectator preferences for violence bid up the
monetary return to this behavior, and the rational response is a
more violent or aggressive output.
The optimum level of violent or aggressive play in sporting
contests is an empirical issue and this book contains chapters on
violence and aggression in sports, concentrating on the reasons for
the existence and persistence of such behavior. Following a chapter
devoted to the history of violence and aggression in sports,
subsequent chapters are designed to cover the breadth of
international professional sports including American football,
soccer, ice hockey, basketball, baseball, auto racing, and fighting
sports. Each chapter will contain econometric analysis of violence
and aggressive play in a given sport. The individual chapters will
examine whether or not a given sports league or governing body
should intervene to reduce violence, and where intervention is
warranted, extent of appropriate interventions is evaluated. In
addition to academics and students concerned with the economics and
history of sport, the book s emphasis on policies at the league and
governing-body levels means this book will also be of interest
representatives of those institutions.."
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