The EventRights consortium has completed all deliverables set out at the beginning of the project in 2018. One of the main goals was to provide opportunities for early-stage and more experienced researchers to learn from each other. Additionally, we aimed to bring academic partners into dialogue with stakeholders from the sport (event) and human rights landscape.
Over the last few years, we have hosted nine online and in-person events and training forums, as well as one International Research Training School at Western University in May 2023. The two-week program brought researchers and experts together to discuss human rights in mega sporting events, with over 35 PhD students and senior academics in attendance. We have held over 75 presentations at international conferences, with about 70% taking place at partner institutions. There have been 38 peer-reviewed publications, with 18 co-authored by partners, and 13 of these articles were co-authored by PhD students and ESRs to aid in learning how to write journal articles.
Additionally, there have been blog posts by ESRs on the EventRights website and two online interviews conducted by a PhD student interviewing ERs, available on YouTube. ERs have participated in discussions on five different podcasts. Dr. Duignan appeared on Sky News in 2022 to debate “Common Ground: Should Wimbledon ban Russian tennis players?” EventRights members appeared in the Guardian to discuss the Tokyo zones project, and Dr. Piekarz from Coventry was interviewed by BBC’s Chris Jones about his research at the Rugby World Cup in Japan. Dr. Koenigstorfer organized a workshop at St. Gallen University, where media representatives and the public, including Swiss Olympic representatives, discussed human rights issues around the Olympic Games.
We produced a case study report providing tools, guidelines, and protocols for enshrining rights in the bidding, planning, and delivery of MSEs for stakeholders, as well as a special issue in Event Management (volume 7, number 6). The special issue contains nine research articles and one commentary.
To sustain research beyond the project, we submitted five research grant applications, three of which were successful. For wider dissemination, the University of West of Scotland commissioned a documentary film, based on content from the consortium, including interviews with academic and non-academic partners and individuals with lived experience from major sporting events.