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This book presents a fresh perspective on football fandom in
England, going beyond existing debates surrounding the structural
transformations English football has seen in recent decades, to
consider the contested cultural ground upon which football fandom
exists. Supporter Ownership in English Football connects cultural
conflict experienced across society associated with negotiating
structural changes such as globalisation, commodification and
social exclusion, with supporter ownership in football - which is
in itself an expression and reflection of broader social and
political shifts in class-consciousness. Discourses of identity,
authenticity, loyalty, ownership and above all, the possibilities
and limitations for ordinary people to influence change, play a
decisive role in how fans come to decide whether they could, or
should, have a meaningful say in the future of their club and the
game itself. While celebrating the achievements, progress and
potential of the supporter ownership movement, the book is also
careful to take account of the various setbacks, contradictions and
limiting tendencies that continue to shape its developmental
trajectory. Porter's relation of football supporter ownership to
the political and social class dynamics of contemporary society
will be of interest to scholars of sport studies, sociology,
cultural studies and politics, and those interested in social
movements, consumerism, identity, authenticity and community.
A lack of 'sustainability thinking' is evident at the heart of many
of the problems that football faces today; from the huge amounts of
money that clubs seem compelled to spend on what are often
short-term gains - and the speculation, debt and market-centred
ideology that goes with it - to the not unrelated deep
disenchantment experienced by many football fans for a game that
they still, despite it all, remain determined to love.
Sustainability here is more broadly conceptualised than focusing on
environmental issues. It encompasses social and economic
sustainability, albeit with a critical eye on the interdependent,
often contradictory, relationship between what the United Nations
regards as the three 'pillars' of sustainability (environmental,
social and economic). Fittingly, this book is the result of an
international collaboration between an interdisciplinary network of
academics and football industry practitioners, brought together by
the Centre for the Study of Football and its Communities (CSFC),
based at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. The critical
insights collected here focus not just on football's problems, but
also how clubs, authorities, players and fans in a range of local
contexts are positively tackling the challenges of surviving and
thriving in the contemporary global game. This book was originally
published as a special issue of Sport & Society.
A lack of 'sustainability thinking' is evident at the heart of many
of the problems that football faces today; from the huge amounts of
money that clubs seem compelled to spend on what are often
short-term gains - and the speculation, debt and market-centred
ideology that goes with it - to the not unrelated deep
disenchantment experienced by many football fans for a game that
they still, despite it all, remain determined to love.
Sustainability here is more broadly conceptualised than focusing on
environmental issues. It encompasses social and economic
sustainability, albeit with a critical eye on the interdependent,
often contradictory, relationship between what the United Nations
regards as the three 'pillars' of sustainability (environmental,
social and economic). Fittingly, this book is the result of an
international collaboration between an interdisciplinary network of
academics and football industry practitioners, brought together by
the Centre for the Study of Football and its Communities (CSFC),
based at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. The critical
insights collected here focus not just on football's problems, but
also how clubs, authorities, players and fans in a range of local
contexts are positively tackling the challenges of surviving and
thriving in the contemporary global game. This book was originally
published as a special issue of Sport & Society.
Scapegoat-The Scales of Justice Burning is a book about my life and
how my name was used to assist a large corporation avoid corporate
responsibility and the consequences of a bad decision. The Supreme
Court of Canada ruled that their decision was in bad faith and
upheld a lower court judgment of one million dollars against Pilot
Insurance Company. To the surprise of the author, they also named
him as a catalyst in creating a train of thought with the decision
makers of Pilot Insurance Company and also aligned him as one of
the decision makers. This book is the author's attempt to prove
with evidence compiled from the very court where he was never
called to testify, that he was not a decision maker who made the
decision to deny their insured's claim, and did not evoke a train
of thought as described in the Supreme Court of Canada ruling.
Scapegoat-The Scales of Justice Burning is also about the
implications of abusing a person's name as if it carries no meaning
or purpose. As exemplified by the description of some of my own
ancestors, there is clearly more meaning in a person's name than
the disrespect shown by the Supreme Court of Canada. A court that
truly believes that its status is greater than the citizens it
serves and the government that appoints Supreme Court of Canada
Justices. Scapegoat-The Scales of Justice Burning has been a
crusade that restores democratic rights for individual citizens of
Canada and to confront those who would burn down the very
foundation of justice. Natural justice has not been served. It is
uncanny that in a democratic society, there would be no mechanism
in place for judicial review and correction to address an injustice
whereby one's reputation is damaged by comments made by a high
court.
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