£65.00

Hart Publishing Governing the Society of Competition: Cycling, Doping and the Law

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Last 635 days • 635 data points (No recent data available)

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£85.00 £6.88 £23.92 £40.97 £58.01 £75.06 £92.10 07 July 2024 12 December 2024 20 May 2025 25 October 2025 02 April 2026

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Price distribution over 635 days • 5 price ranges

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46 days 35 days 51 days 392 days · current 111 days 0 98 196 294 392 £14-28 £28-42 £42-57 £57-71 £71-85 Days at Price

Price Analysis

Most common range: £57-71 (392 days, 61.7%)

Price range: £14 - £85

Price levels: 5 price ranges over 635 days

Description

This book considers the manner in which the making and implementation of law and governance is changing in the global context. It explores this through a study of the deployment of the global anti-doping apparatus including the World Anti-Doping Code and its institutions with specific reference to professional cycling, a sport that has been at the forefront of some of the most famous doping cases and controversies in recent years. Critically, it argues that the changes to law and governance are not restricted to sport and anti-doping, but are actually inherent in broader processes associated with neoliberalism and social and behavioural surveillance and affect all aspects of society and its political institutions. The author engages with concepts and arguments in contemporary social theory, including: Dardot and Laval on neoliberalism; Agamben on sovereignty; Hardt and Negri on globalisation; and others including Foucault, Deleuze and Guattari, and Louis Dumont. The work seeks to answer a question posed by both Foucault and Agamben; that is, given the growing primacy of the arts of government, what is the juridical form and theory of sovereignty that is able to sustain and found this primacy? It is argued that this question can be understood by reference to the shift from a social or public contract that was understood to be the foundation of society, to a society that is constituted by consent, private agreement and contract. In addition, the book examines the juridical concepts of the rule of law and sovereignty. Commencing with the Festina scandal of 1998, the Spanish case of Operación Puerto and concluding with the fall from grace of the American cyclist Lance Armstrong in 2012, the principal processes examined include: - The increasing crossing of the borders between different legal regimes (whether supranational or simply particularised) and with it the erosion of what we knew as state sovereignty and constitutionalism; - The increasing use of judgment achieved through the media and how this arrives at new configurations of moral panic and scapegoating; - The creation of a need for rapid outcomes at the expense of the modernist value or version of the rule of law; - The increasing use of new and alternative methods of guilt, proof and ultra-legal detection.

Product Specifications

Format
hardcover
Domain
Amazon UK
Release Date
29 October 2020
Listed Since
21 May 2020

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