Sports - Final-SDP-recovering-better
Sports - Final-SDP-recovering-better
Foreword
The multifaceted and unprecedented impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic have torn at the
already fraying social fabric, deepening inequalities, sharpening divides and heralding a
need for transformative change.
The world of sport was among those sectors most visibly affected -- hard and early.
Already a pioneer and promoter of inclusive and sustainable development in an unstable and unequal
world, the sporting world must now redefine and redesign itself, not only to improve its resilience to
future shocks, but to broaden its contribution to the world’s efforts to meet the Sustainable
Development Goals.
Sport has often helped to create spaces for dialogue, advance gender equality, promote social inclusion
and tackle discrimination against vulnerable groups. It has played this role at all levels of society, from
the smallest communities to the global village. It has provided avenues for improving individual health
and community well-being. We continue to count on sport to provide this space.
The professional and elite sport world should also be recognized for its significant contributions during
the pandemic period. These have included the offering of sports stadiums as medical facilities, including
for storing medical supplies, carrying out COVID-19 testing and serving as temporary hospitals or as
potential “surge sites,” when the number of patients exceeds hospital capacity. Sports stadiums have
also been offered as polling locations, to provide venues for safe and socially distanced voting.
This advocacy brief hopes to provide Member States and the sporting world with the information that
they need to approach reopening, recovery, resilience and transformation in a collaborative way. This
can help ensure that the world of sport continues to make its vital and valued contributions to building
a better future for all.
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Introduction
Many sporting events were postponed or cancelled due to the risk of mass gatherings1
amplifying the transmission of the virus, as well as risks to athletes and professionals
supporting these players and events. It was many months into the crisis before, with
much innovation and collaboration, athletes began to return to arenas, in most cases, with
fans still absent, and with varying consequences for the athletes and their families.
Just as professional and elite sport has been heavily impacted by COVID-19, sport for all
and sport for development organizations, as well as sport within the education sector and
recreational sphere, have also been hard hit. Lockdowns, imposed for safety, saw many
communities without the sporting activities that had kept them moving pre-crisis, with
many children out of school and community-based sport programmes unable to hold in-
person activities as gyms, fitness studios, pools and many other spaces became not safely
accessible to the public. In some parts of the world, where transmission rates have
dropped or the safety situation has otherwise improved, some spaces and activities are
slowly re-emerging, drawing from various pockets of information and experience to
create the protocols and practices to serve safely.
These piecemeal efforts will not be enough to bring back sport and physical activity at
the scale required to ensure its much needed contribution to human well-being. The
present brief sets out a vision to support the reopening, recovery and resilience of sport.
The brief first highlights critical intersects between sport, physical activity, SDG
2
achievement and COVID-19 impact, the consequences of these intersects for our
individual and collective wellbeing and ideas for addressing these consequences. It then
presents critical actions or issues to be addressed across four key areas - promoting
human rights and combatting discrimination; ensuring equal access to sport and physical
activity; safeguarding participants; and ensuring integrity in sport- seeking to imagine
the necessary course adjustments for bringing the sporting world safely back into full
operation with renewed and refocused vigor.
The brief concludes by homing in on the role of the UN system in this multilateral,
multistakeholder re-envisioning of sport as both an end and a means in the recovery from
the impacts of COVID-19.
2 These include the United Nations Convention against Corruption and related resolutions; Human rights
conventions and instruments including the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against
Women (CEDAW), the Beijing Platform for Action, the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) and the
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD); General Assembly resolutions 73/24 on sport as an
enabler of sustainable development and 74/170 on integrating sport into youth crime prevention and criminal justice
strategies; Children’s Rights in Sport Principles (UNICEF); Sport for Generation Equality Principles; the World
Summit for Social Development (also includes the Copenhagen Declaration and Programme of Action of the World
Summit for Social Development; Sport for Protection Toolkit (UNHCR, IOC, Terres des Hommes); and Points of
Consensus, adopted by the ILO’s tripartite constituents at the Global Dialogue Forum on Decent Work in the World
of Sport 2020.
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Sport, COVID-19 and the SDGs
The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development recognizes sport as an important enabler
of sustainable development. It highlights the growing contribution of sport to the
realization of development and peace in its promotion of tolerance and respect. Member
States, the United Nations system, international sport federations and other stakeholders
have been establishing guiding normative frameworks and frameworks for collaborative
action on sport, physical activity and active play that use sport as a platform for achieving
wider development outcomes. COVID-19 has added a new urgency to such efforts, as
data indicates that COVID-19 has and will further increase inequalities, discrimination
and marginalization.3
As countries around the world grapple with the many harmful impacts of the COVID-19
pandemic, the sport community can redouble its efforts to contribute to SDG
achievement, particularly in the areas of health and wellbeing, quality education, gender
equality, decent work and employment, reducing inequalities, sustainable cities and
communities, responsible production and consumption, climate action and peace, justice
and strong institutions, all with attention to building strong and inclusive partnerships
for the goals.
3Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Sustainable Development Goals Report 2020:
[Link]
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as heighten the need the need for mental health services, given the role of physical activity
in regulating stress and other dangers to mental health.
Sports-based programmes can also be vehicles to develop and bolster the social and
emotional skills in children and young people, needed to address the vulnerabilities that
are the direct consequences of stress caused by the health impacts of COVID-19, the
policies associated with COVID-19 prevention (including physical distancing), and/or
the socioeconomic impacts of the pandemic. In addition, athletes and sport programmes
can play a powerful role, as major catalysts for promoting positive behavioural changes,
public health practices and social safety measures, and for de-stigmatization of mental
health issues.
4 [Link]
5 [Link]
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should be championed to meet the holistic needs of all children and youth. There will
also be an urgent need to step up support to ensure equal opportunities for learners from
typically excluded populations, including girls, persons with disabilities, indigenous
peoples, stateless people, migrants, internally displaced people, and refugees, to benefit
from sport in schools, as well as through community-based programmes. Engagement in
active, values-based life and social skills learning either in formal educational settings
(e.g. physical education classes) or nonformal/ informal educational settings (e.g. in the
community or in sports clubs) should also form part of the approach in mainstreaming
sport in national development in the post COVID-19 era.
There is a further risk that the professional and elite sport world, facing reduced resources
and revenues, may default to earlier models that privileged investment in men’s sport.
This threatens to erase the recent and accelerating gains for women in sport. Sponsors,
media, professional and elite sport organizations should continue to step up their support
to expand women’s opportunities as athletes, professionals and leaders across the sport
ecosystem.8
library/publications/2020/06/brief-covid-19-women-girls-and-sport-build-back-better
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place. If not effectively done, this may affect employment in all of these related sectors.
The promotion of decent work in sporting activities and sports related activities is central9
and sport organizations must ensure that they continue to protect the rights of athletes,
including in relation to challenges faced in exercising social dialogue, freedom of
association and collective bargaining, discrimination, violence and racism against
players, risk to young athletes, risks to the health and safety of athletes, including long-
term physical and mental health issues, and difficulties maintaining employability after
a career in sports.
Measures should be taken to address new challenges arising from COVID-19, for example
ensuring that no athletes are forced to sign insurance liability waivers and that all safety
and health precautions have been taken when activities resume. Representation is
necessary to guarantee freedom of association and collective bargaining. Promoting SDG
implementation and international human rights standards should be part of bidding,
planning and running mega-sporting events. Additionally, Governments, the private
sector and other relevant stakeholders, such as workers organizations, must also ensure
to combat child labour and trafficking in persons, particularly in the context of mega-
sporting events and sporting goods manufacturing, but also more broadly across the
sport ecosystem.
9 The international labour standards and in particular the fundamental principles and rights at work that are enshrined
in the eight ILO core Conventions and the ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work, 1998,
provide a legal framework and guidance for concrete action.
10 [Link]
11 Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Sustainable Development Goals Report
2020: [Link]
2020
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Professional athletes and sport organizations can use their voices to raise awareness
regarding the need to overcome the inequalities both demonstrated and exacerbated by
COVID-19, as well as regarding the types of measures that will need to be taken to do so.
A recent study revealed that 72% of fans believe that athletes provide unique views and
are an important influence.12 As sport will also benefit from an expanded audience due
to increased internet access, the sport world can also advocate and contribute to reducing
the digital divide.
As athlete activism rises, efforts should be dedicated to make athletes aware of their
potential as role models and their responsibility as individuals with such far-reaching
platforms. This requires that stakeholders keep athletes informed about these key sport-
related issues and seek their involvement and to help develop the appropriate
frameworks to support and benefit from the rise of athlete activism.
12 [Link]
higher-purpose-beyond-entertainment/#790f677e5958
13 [Link]
Responses
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SDG 12: Responsible production and consumption: Sporting
events, particularly mega events, can present a range of
environmental challenges, including in relation to production and
consumption of materials and generation of waste, such as single-
use plastic. Sport stadiums and arenas are some of the largest
consumers of energy, materials and water. Momentum has been
building within the sporting community to address negative
environmental impacts of the industry and increase the contributions of sport to the
achievement of relevant SDGs.
As sporting events resume in the post-COVID-19 period, sports organizations may need
to contend with many changes wrought by the virus, including to supply chains and
manufacturing. Approximately 70 per cent of the global sporting goods industry, for
example, faced supply chain disruption, as demand for sporting goods decreased
worldwide.14 In the face of these, sports organizations may wish to reaffirm or strengthen
commitments to ensuring that future events will contribute to environmental
sustainability.
Climate change and extreme weather events, particularly rising temperatures, also
increasingly place pressure on sporting events, and pose risks to both athletes and the
sporting industry. Athletes and sport organizations can have an important role in
advocating for climate action and are invited to support and strengthen environmental
sustainability and combat climate change. For example, the global sport community can
combat climate change, through commitments and partnerships according to verified
standards, including measuring, reducing, and reporting greenhouse gas emissions and
14 [Link]
15 United in Science 2020: [Link]
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use sports as a unifying tool to federate and create solidarity among global citizens for
climate action.16
SDG 16: Peace, justice and strong institutions: The global spread
of the COVID-19 pandemic has increased the risk of exposure to
violence and exploitation and eroded the capacity of services to
respond. These challenges are particularly acute in regions already
struggling with conflict or other humanitarian emergencies. In
addition to the Secretary-General’s appeal for a global ceasefire,
the General Assembly decided to observe the Olympic Truce
throughout the Tokyo Games, now rescheduled for 2021. Sport can
continue to be used to help build bridges between communities in conflict and refugee,
internally displaced and host communities affected by displacement as a result of conflict;
to create a window of opportunity for dialogue, reconciliation, alternate dispute
resolution and informal justice mechanisms aligned with international standards.
Sport also offers an important vehicle for violence and crime prevention17, supporting
peacebuilding and post conflict resolution efforts, as well as for fostering protective and
inclusive environments that can contribute to countering and preventing violent
extremism.18 It teaches life skills and values such as tolerance and respect, promotes
teamwork, social inclusion and social cohesion, which can empower young participants
and create safe spaces for youth to positively interact and develop. Sport can also build
the resilience of children and youth in the face of instability, such as that imposed by
COVID-19, as well as increase their rejection of violence and crime, and promote conflict
prevention and peaceful co-existence. Equal attention should be given to research on
sport and its values as tools to complement the above work in efforts to help identify
good practices and design evidence-based responses.
SDG 17: Partnerships for the goals: Achieving any and all of the
SDGs requires effective and sustainable whole-of-society
approaches. Sport can catalyze, build and strengthen multi-
stakeholder networks and partnerships for sustainable
development and peace goals, involving and bringing together the
public, governments, donors, NGOs, sport organizations, the
private sector, academia and the media. The presence and diversity
of sport and sport organizations on local, national, regional and
international levels can provide effective networks for partnerships and implementation
of programmes. Sport can serve as a link between different sectors which can address a
wide variety of topics, pool resources and create synergies. The sport, development and
16 [Link]
17 [Link]
18
UNODC, 2020, Technical Guide on Preventing Violent Extremism through Sport, available at
[Link] also see: ‘Global
Programme on Security of Major Sporting Events, and Promotion of Sport and Its Values as a Tool to Prevent Violent
Extremism’ at [Link]
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peace communities can contribute to collaboratively measuring progress of sustainable
development by assessing and reporting on the contributions of sport to the SDGs.19
19 [Link]
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Adjusting Course and Accelerating Action Through Sport
The intersects of sport, the SDGs and COVID-19 point to four key focus areas for the
sporting world in shaping COVID-19 response and recovery: promoting human rights
and combatting discrimination; ensuring equal access to sport and physical activity;
safeguarding participants; and ensuring integrity in sport.
Due to its influence on culture and society, sport can be instrumental in promoting
human rights norms and countering discrimination, consistent with the UN Charter’s
reaffirmation of faith in fundamental human rights, the dignity and worth of the human
person and in the equal rights of men and women. The strength of sport as a platform to
inspire has been demonstrated in recent highly publicized athlete-led actions to combat
racism. The promotion of human rights by the competitive and commercial sports
industries, and their efforts to embed these principles in their own work, are also of great
importance in the context of the pandemic, which has in some instances, exacerbated
racism, hate speech and scapegoating, and been associated with spikes in domestic and
gender-based violence, and violence against children under confinement. The role of the
sporting community in promoting social inclusion and solidarity and in combating
negative stereotypes and abuse, including by speaking out against discriminatory and
harmful behavior, is therefore especially needed at this time.
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Beyond advocacy, sport for development actors are also highly encouraged to embrace
the human rights principles of non-discrimination and equality, as well as provisions
contained in relevant human rights instruments regarding the right to play, leisure and
sport, indigenous and traditional sport and games, gender equality and the
empowerment of women and girls, and sport for well-being; and to promote sports
interventions as means to foster social inclusion, social cohesion, protection and skills
development.
Safeguarding Participants
In the context of COVID-19 health precautions, the WHO has issued guidance for sport,
which offers advice on how to organize these events and to apply a rigorous, systematic
risk assessment exercise to ensure safety.20 WHO recommends that a risk-based
approach should always be used at policy level to facilitate planning of mass gatherings
during the COVID-19 pandemic, and at the event level to evaluate any associated health
risks, put in place measures to decrease such risks, and communicate information on
adjustments made to the event and on residual level of risk. While the future is still very
uncertain, many sport organizations recognize that the pandemic could cause a
widespread change to sports as we know them, and to how events are organized going
20 [Link]
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forward; in this context, it is crucial that standardized and evidence-based approaches
are adopted to decide if and how an event should proceed.
In this regard, recovering better means stronger engagement with children, youth and
participants in vulnerable situations through meaningful consultations and other
appropriate mechanisms, to ensure ethical and meaningful participation in decisions that
affect them, including standard setting, in line with the Human Rights Based Approach
and relevant human rights instruments. Governments and sports organizations, with
support from international organizations, should raise standards in child protection and
the safeguarding of sport participants, particularly those in vulnerable situations, and
those affected by mega-sport events, establish or strengthen accessible reporting
mechanisms and invest in awareness-raising.
Sport organizations have also created important virtual networks to engage children,
young people, families and communities in staying healthy and active; in the process
providing a platform for connection and social support beyond the delivery of sport
programmes. Such innovative practices, if maintained post pandemic can expand access
to these new learning tools and networks and ensure that the sport for development and
peace sector is prepared to adapt again in the event of future shocks.
While these online tools have proven invaluable, COVID-19 has brought to the fore how
precarious access to ICTs is in many parts of the world. At the end of 2019, the
International Technological Union estimated that around 3.6 billion people remain
offline.21 The situation is much worse in Least Developed Countries where an average of
21 [Link]
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two out of every ten people are online and the majority of the worlds refugees and other
displaced, now almost 80 million people, are living without reliable internet and mobile
connectivity.22 Expanding access will require infrastructure (digital and products) and
services (internet) to be put in place and to be accessible, usable and affordable.
In some instances, in-person sport and physical activity events and opportunities
continue to be carried out during the COVID-19 period. In such cases, it is critical that
organizers take all necessary measures to ensure safety and protect public health,
including by conducting risk assessment and putting in place risk mitigation measures.
The WHO’s guidelines have been used by numerous sport federations to develop
guidance for organizing their training and competitions, whether outdoors or indoors.
There remains a need, however, for more tailored approaches for different activities,
including those carried out at community level.
In the context of the professional and elite sport world, the return to activity must
continue to expand opportunities for participation that are equitable for all. The process
of rebuilding can include continuing to close opportunity gaps for groups that have been
traditionally excluded from the field of play.23 The sporting community may reduce these
barriers by tailoring appropriate measures to address exclusionary factors such as
cultural context, age, gender, and socio-economic considerations, and ensure that sport
and physical activity are truly accessible. It is of particular importance to ensure that, in
the return to activity, women’s sport and disability sport are not side-lined and continue
to receive the significant investment experienced pre-COVID-19. Any reduction will
represent a retrograde movement, reversing significant gains from a sporting, gender
equality and disability rights perspective. Recovering better must also mean stronger
support for other sectors of the industry from men’s professional sport, to continue to
ensure equitable opportunities and growth across the entire eco-system.
22[Link]
23Including but not limited to persons with disabilities, older persons, LGBTI people, refugees, indigenous peoples,
internally displaced people, stateless people and migrants and persons deprived of liberty.
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Recommended actions include implementing commitments made through the adoption
of relevant resolutions24 and ensuring that resources and support provided to sport
during the pandemic are used for their intended purposes and not diverted for illicit gain.
Key to this is ensuring that good governance measures are in place in sports
organizations in order help reduce corruption risks and associated inequalities and
injustices which have been exacerbated by the pandemic.
Devoting time and efforts to implementing the above recommendations would represent
a major and significant contribution by the international community to strengthening the
integrity of sport during these challenging times. This would also contribute to the
emerging global framework around enhancing the contribution of sport to development
and peace. Furthermore, to strengthen the protection of athletes and promote the ethics
of sport, enhancing the integrity of sport requires implementation of commitments to
anti-doping.25
The United Nations system has an important role to play in supporting Member States to
best use sport to “recover better” in the context of COVID-19. In 2020 and 2021, many UN
24 [Link]
25International Convention Against Doping in Sport: [Link]
doping/convention
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Country Teams will be embarking on new Common Country Assessment and UN
Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework processes, which provide the
framework for engagement between governments and the UN. The inclusion of sport for
development and peace within these could contribute significantly to its increased
utilization.
The UN system can further support Member States and other relevant actors by
increasing their provision of capacity development and technical cooperation services to
support effective leveraging of sport in implementation of the relevant international
normative frameworks and policy instruments. Such support can focus on advancing
policies, strategies and programmes and data collection for the use of sport as an effective
tool to advance sustainable development, promote inclusion, tolerance and respect, and
build resilient societies.
UN system entities, within their respective mandates, can also play an important role in
raising awareness on the role that sport can play in “recovering better,” including
through partnerships with mass media and international sporting bodies with national
and international reach. Governments, the United Nations and the sporting community,
including the sporting education community, can disseminate WHO and other guidance
on individual and collective measures to counter the pandemic. Measures must be taken
to reach communities that have limited access to the Internet and social media. Efforts
must also be made to reach actors at all levels and across all facets of the sport sector,
including in decision-making, sport education professional and community sport, and to
support engagement of actors across the sector, and at all levels, to enable effective
mechanisms for ensuring needs are identified and that important feedback and
information on scalable solutions reach the ears of those who need to hear it.26
26[Link]
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[Link]