2006
DOI: 10.1080/16184740600955087
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A Conceptual Framework for Analysing Sports Policy Factors Leading to International Sporting Success

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Cited by 339 publications
(458 citation statements)
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“…Green and Oakley (2001) highlighted the link to the GDR/Soviet Union systems arguing that "many antecedents of the former Eastern Bloc"s "managed approach" to elite sport are increasingly apparent" (p. 247) in international elite sports systems. De Bosscher et al (2006) also support this viewpoint by stating "the former eastern bloc countries have undoubtedly played an important role in current developments of elite sport" (p. 194). The GDR/Soviet Union system was considered "the vanguard of developing sporting excellence" (Green & Oakley, 2001, p. 247) due to its consistent approach to producing high performance success that demonstrated high performance sport was not a matter of ad hoc chance or dependent upon uncontrollable environmental factors.…”
Section: The Global Sporting Arms Racementioning
confidence: 77%
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“…Green and Oakley (2001) highlighted the link to the GDR/Soviet Union systems arguing that "many antecedents of the former Eastern Bloc"s "managed approach" to elite sport are increasingly apparent" (p. 247) in international elite sports systems. De Bosscher et al (2006) also support this viewpoint by stating "the former eastern bloc countries have undoubtedly played an important role in current developments of elite sport" (p. 194). The GDR/Soviet Union system was considered "the vanguard of developing sporting excellence" (Green & Oakley, 2001, p. 247) due to its consistent approach to producing high performance success that demonstrated high performance sport was not a matter of ad hoc chance or dependent upon uncontrollable environmental factors.…”
Section: The Global Sporting Arms Racementioning
confidence: 77%
“…The continuous pursuit of international sporting success is an increasingly taken-forgranted behavior within many developed countries (Digel, 2002;De Bosscher et al, 2006, 2008Green & Houlihan, 2005;Houlihan & Green, 2008;Kikulis, Slack, & Hinings, 1992;Slack & Hinings, 1994). Academics have labelled this phenomenon the "global sporting arms race" (De Bosscher et al, 2006), which has resulted in nation states investing substantial sums of funding for success at the Olympic and increasingly the Paralympic Games (Beacom & Brittain, 2016;De Bosscher et al, 2006, 2008Green & Houlihan, 2005;Green & Oakley, 2001;Grix & Carmichael, 2012).…”
Section: The Global Sporting Arms Racementioning
confidence: 99%
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