Paratexto Acesso aberto

Index

2023; Elsevier BV; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1108/s1476-285420230000018013

ISSN

1476-2854

Tópico(s)

Sports, Gender, and Society

Resumo

Citation (2023), "Index", McGee, D. and Bunn, C. (Ed.) Gambling and Sports in a Global Age (Research in the Sociology of Sport, Vol. 18), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 193-200. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1476-285420230000018013 Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited Copyright © 2024 Darragh McGee and Christopher Bunn. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited INDEX Accountability, 84–85 Age, 21 Aktiebolaget Trav och Galopp (ATG), 60, 65 Alcohol, 94 Alleged feminisation of sports betting globally and in the United Kingdom, 146–149 Animal welfare issues, 70–71 organisations, 70–71 Ante-post auction, 14 Anti-gamblers, 18 Asian bookmaking company, 132 Asian gambling companies, The, 132–133 Asian gambling market, The, 134, 137 Asian sports gambling market, 131–132 fixers work, 140–141 globalisation of corruption, 137–140 Hill’s rule, 139 lack of governance, 139–140 legal and illegal markets, 132 low vig, zero taxes and know-your customer, 132–134 market for games, 137–138 methods, 130–131 relative exploitation, 138–139 structure of illegal Asian sports gambling industry, 134–136 Athletes, 48–49 Australian Football League (AFL), 173 Aztecs, 12 Baseball, 20–21 Bet365 (British gambling firm), 1–2, 27, 48, 185, 188 BetMGM, 2 Betting, 146–147 companies, 188 Betting, Gaming and Lotteries Act (1961), 20 Betting Houses Act (1853), 19–20 Betting Offices, 20 Big Data, 43 economy, 50 Big Gambling, 186, 189 Bivariable analysis, 96 Bivariable associations, 98–99 Bookmaking, 21 Booming industry, 75–76 Bovril, 26 Boxing, 139 Brand activation strategies, 34–35 Brand engagement in digital age advertising and marketing in football, 26–27 English premier league clubs and gambling partners, 27 evoking cultural tradition, 30–31 findings, 30–35 methods, 28–29 Newcastle United and FUN88, 28 promoting gambling and generating business globally, 31–33 Britain’s National Lottery, 14–15 British Select Committees, 12–13, 18 Broadcasters, 173 Cambridge Analytica, 46 Casinos, 12 Celebrity endorsements, 177 Celestial Church of Christ, 114–115 Charter of Player Data Rights, 42 Children, normalisation of gambling for, 174–178 Christian Social Council, 18–19 Christianity, 122 Churches Committee on Gambling, 18–19 Class, 21 Club fandom, 90–91 Clubs, 82–83 Collective Bargaining Agreement, 42 ‘Commercial determinants of health’ concept, 186 Commodification of data, 45–46, 51–52 Comprehensive public health approach, 171, 178–179 Continuous control, 189 Corruption, globalisation of, 137–140 Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU), 62 COVID-19, 64 Cricket, 149 Cultural justifications of horse racing sectors, 63–66 ‘Cut soap for me’ phenomenon, 120 Cutting edge technology, 188–189 Data, 28–29, 51 critical questions for future of data governance, 50–53 revolution, 6, 42–43 and societal discontents, 43–46 Datafication of society, 43 of sport, 46–50 Datafied society, 45–46 Deconstructing gambling as ‘normal’ and ‘risk-free’ activity, 82 Denormalising gambling, 81 in sports clubs, 80–84 Digital data, 47 economy, 46 sets, 43 Digital gambling ecosystem, 2 Digital products, 59 Digital technologies, 43, 50 Disembedded gambling, 188–189 Dismantling gambling-related language, 83–84 E-bay, 132–133 EAGS, The, 150–152 Economic pressure, 85–86 Educational sessions, 82 Educational strategies, 179 Eire betting offices, 15 Electronic gambling machines (EGMs), 59 Elite athletes, 46 Emerging adult, 151–152 English Football Association, 18 English Premier League (EPL), 26 clubs and gambling partners, 27 EU Rural Development Programme, 59–60 European Commissioner for Consumer Protection, 44 European contexts, 62 European Enlightenment, 13 European Free Trade Association (EFTA), 62 European Trade Agreement (ETA), 62 Exploratory research design, 113 Fancy, The, 15–16 Fetish, 110 Fetishism, 110 FIFA World Cup (1970), 32 FIFA World Cup (2018), 138 FIFPRO, 42 Financial harms, 159 Financial justifications of horse racing sectors, 63–66 Finland, 59 Finnish Veikkaus, The, 63–64 Five-star system, 140–141 Folk religion, 110 in Nigeria, 111–112, 120, 122 realities of folk religion in gambling among young Nigerians, 116–117 Football, 26–27, 90, 149 advertising and marketing in, 26–27 banter, 35 data, 49–50 gamblers, 34–35 pools, 14–15, 20 self-reported motivations for placing football bets, 98 talk, 35 Football Association, 48–49 Football betting bivariable associations, 98–99 data analysis, 96 design and participants, 93–94 measures, 94–96 methods, 93–96 multivariable associations, 99–100 onset and source of initiation of, 97 platforms, 90 prevalence estimates, 97 procedure, 96 research questions, 93 results, 96–100 sample characteristics, 96–97 self-reported motivations for placing football bets, 98 French Pari Mutuel Urbain (PMU), 68 FUN88, 28–29, 31–32, 34 GambleAware, 34 ‘Gamblification’ of sport, 1, 48, 75–76, 90, 147, 185 Gambling, 33, 53, 58, 63, 75–76, 91–92, 110–111, 119 advertising strategies, 170–171 adverts, 119 alignment between gambling products and promotions and sporting contexts, 172–173 brands, 30, 48 companies, 42, 101–102, 185 corporations, 188–189 dismantling gambling myths and deconstructing normalising sports cultures, 83–84 firms, 42–43 football and male gamblers, 34–35 gambling-related match-fixing, 78 and generating business, 31–33 harms and women, 150–151 industry, 189–190 normalisation of gambling for children and young people, 174–178 normalisation of gambling in sports clubs, 77–80 partners, 27 products, 172 realities of folk religion in gambling among young Nigerians, 116–117 role of marketing in normalisation of gambling for young people, 175–178 sponsorship, 149 systematised in Nigeria, 120–122 Gambling Act (2005), 20, 27, 31–32, 48, 147–149 Gambling Commission, The, 147, 185 Games, market for, 137–138 Gaming, 12 Gaming Act (1845), 19–20 Gaming Act (2006), 91–92 Gender, 21 determinants of sports betting among young people and relationship with, 149–150 General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), 42, 44, 51 German-based Croatians, The, 140 Ghana, 91–92 Ghana Football Association (GFA), 137 Ghana Gaming Commission, 91–92 Ghanaian context, 92–93, 103–104 Glaser’s grounded theory (Glaser’s GT), 114 Global leisure economy, 1–2 Global public health threat, normalisation of gambling as, 171–172 Globalisation, 135–136 of corruption, 137–140 Globalised sports gambling market, 137–138 Google, 28–29 Google Forms, 96 Google Scholar, 28–29 Governance, lack of, 139–140 Governments, 21 Grassroots European sports clubs, 76 Grassroots sports clubs, 76 Gross gambling revenue (GGR), 61–62 Hill’s Rule, 139 Historical justifications of horse racing sectors, 63–66 Hong Kong Jockey Club, 132 Horse industry, 59–60 Horse racing, 15–16, 57–58, 69, 71 animal and jockey welfare issues, 70–71 costs of operation, 66–68 data, 61 expansion and prospects of Nordic horse racing industries, 68 historical, cultural and financial justifications of horse racing sectors, 63–66 impression management and justifications, 69 income statement analysis, 62–63 industry, 59 limitations and suggestions for further studies, 71 methods, 59–63 provision, 61 results, 63–68 surplus for state and to sector, 69–70 text analysis, 61–62 Horse sector, 58 House of Lords Select Committee on Betting in 1902, 19–20 Human–material nexus, 52–53 Hustling, 112 Hyper-commodification, 26–27 Igbominas, 113 Illegal Asian market, 137 Illegal Asian sports gambling industry, structure of, 134–136 Illegal bookmakers, 134 Illegal markets, 132 Illegal sports gambling networks, 136 Impression management, 61 and justifications, 69 Incision, 121 Income statement analysis, 62–63 Income statements (IS), 61 India’s Calcutta Turf Club Derby, 14 Indices of Multiple Deprivation (IMD), 152 Inducement marketing, 176–177 Inductive content analysis (ICA), 114 Industry stakeholders, 59 Industry-funding streams, 3 Integrity matters, 80–84 deconstructing gambling as ‘normal’ and ‘risk-free’ activity, 82 dismantling gambling myths and deconstructing normalising sports cultures, 83–84 normalisation of gambling in sports clubs, 77–80 tackling social norms and pressures, 82–83 International Federation of Horse Racing Authorities (IFSA), 57–58 International sport, 137 Internet betting, 92–93 Internet of Things, 45–46 Islam, 122 Jockey Club, The, 16 Jockey welfare issues, 70–71 Juju, 110 Kayan mata products, 111–112 Kenilworth cigarettes, 11–12 Key informants (KI), 113 Know-your customer, 132–134 Knowledge, 51–52, 122 Kwara State Bureau of Statistics, The, 113 Ladbrokes, 17 Lancet Commission, 179 Landmark University Centre for Research, Innovation, and Development (LUCRID), 113–114 Laws, 19 Legal inequalities, 19 Legal markets, 132 Legality, 132–133 Leicester City FC, 27 Logistic regression models, 155 London’s White Conduit Club, 16 Low vig, 132–134 Low-commission business model, 133 Luck, 122–123 Madman Welfare, 121 Major League Baseball (MLB), 42 Male gamblers, 34–35 Market(ing) costs, 67–68 for games, 137–138 role in normalisation of gambling for young people, 175–178 strategies, 122–123 Mass Observation study, 15 Match–fixing, 130 Mathematical probability, 13 Middle-class commentators, 18 Middle-class credit betting, 17 Middling groups, 17 Mobster, 134 Moral and Social Reform Council, 18–19 Multivariable analysis, 96 Multivariable associations, 99–100 Murky market, 138 National Anti-Gambling League, 18–19 National Lottery Authority (NLA), 91–92 Neoliberal capitalism, 187–191 Newcastle United, 28, 31 match programme, 30 Twitter, 28–29 Newcastle United Football Club (FC), 28 Nigeria folk religion and gambling systematised in, 120–122 folk religion and sports betting in, 111–112 NodeXL Pro application, 28–29 Non-gambling revenues, 62 Nordic horse racing industries, expansion and prospects of, 68 Normalisation of gambling as global public health threat, 171–172 of gambling for children and young people, 174–178 of gambling in sports clubs, 77–80 role of marketing in normalisation of gambling for young people, 175–178 of sports betting globally and in United Kingdom, 146–149 young people’s support for action, 178 North American tribal societies, 12 Norway, 59 Observational learning, 174 Online gambling, 112 Online sports betting markets, 75–76 Paddy Power, 48, 188 Pari–mutuel system, 14 Peer-to-peer betting, 13 Peers, 102 People’s Republic of China, 13 Performance data, 42–43 Personal analytics, 45 Personnel costs, 68 Post-industrial economies, 187 Power, 186 Premier League, 42 broadcasting, 35 club, 80 Prevalence estimates, 97 Problem gambling, 3, 91 Productivity harms, 159 Profits over earnings (P/E), 130–131 Project Red Card, 42, 49–51 Public health, 171 concern, 147 researchers, 170–171 Pugilistic Society, The, 16 Qatar World Cup (2022), 82–83 Quantitative method, 131 Racecourse Betting Control Act (1928), 20 Ready Money Football Betting Act (1920), 20 Relationship harms, 159 Relative exploitation, 138–139 Research, 21 Responsibility, 84–85 Responsible gambling, 3, 7, 64, 83–84, 179 Return to players (RTP), 61 Rights of individuals, 44, 51 Royal Commissions on gambling, 12–13 Rugby, 149 Safeguarding, 80–81, 84–85 Sapinas, 140 School-based gambling education programmes, 84 Secular objections, 18 Self-reported motivations for placing football bets, 98 Shaggi’s testimony, 116 Silicon Valley, 46 Singaporean-based Chinese, The, 140 SkyBet, 48 Soap making, 120, 123 Social networks, 15–17 Social pressure, 85–86 Social theory, 4 Society’s acceleration, 43–44 Socio-demographic variables, 94 Sociological imagination, 186–187 Sociologists, 45 Sociology, 4 Solitary betting, 17 South American tribal societies, 12 Sponsorship managers, 26 SportRadar, 138–139 Sports, 13–14, 50, 75–76, 170–171, 173, 178–179, 191 datafication of, 46–50 dismantling gambling myths and deconstructing normalising sports cultures, 83–84 integrity, 80–81 leagues, 82–83 lottery, 14, 20 organisations, 80, 82–83 Sports betting, 90–91, 158 change over time in sports betting systems, 13–15 changing regulation of, 19–21 consumption, 188–189 in context, 187–191 determinants of sports betting among young people and relationship with gender, 149–150 expansion, 190–191 in Nigeria, 111–112 opposition to, 17–19 rise, normalisation and alleged feminisation of sports betting globally and in United Kingdom, 146–149 surveillance and control, 189–190 Sports clubs, 76, 80, 82 denormalising gambling in, 80–84 normalisation of gambling in, 77–80 Sports gambling, 13, 15, 17, 189 change over time in sports betting systems, 13–15 changing regulation of sports betting, 19–21 class, age and gender, 21 critical questions for future of, 50–53 industry, 52 opposition to sports betting, 17–19 products, 188 social networks and sports gambling, 15–17 Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE), 93–94 Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), 90, 110 Sub-Saharan African territories, 2 Surplus for state and to sector, 69–70 Sweden, 57–59 Swedish market, 14–15 Sweepstakes, 20 tickets, 14 Tackling Gambling Stigma project, 163–164 Taxation, 187–188 Technology, 27, 43 firms, 46 Tennis, 138 Thematic analysis, 29 Tradition, 31 Traditional media, 29, 33 Traditional oath-taking, 111 ‘Trans-local’ stadia, 2 Triangulation, 130–131 Trickle-down effect, 53 Twitter, 28–29 UEFA European Women’s Football Championship (2022), 34–35 UK Gambling Act (2005), 52–53 Unhealthy commodity goods, 76 Unhealthy commodity industries (UCIs), 186 Unibet, 2 UNICEF, 179 United Kingdom, The, 13, 52–53 data and methodology, 151–152 determinants of sports betting among young people and relationship with gender, 149–150 football pyramid, 42 gambling harms and women, 150–151 relationship between harms and women sports bettors, 158–159 results and analysis, 152–155 rise, normalisation and alleged feminisation of sports betting globally and in, 146–149 UK Gambling Commission, 80 women sports bettors, 155–158 United Kingdom’s Industry Group for Responsible Gambling (IRRG), 34 United States Department of Justice, The (DoJ), 139 Univariable analysis, 96 University of Ghana, 93–94 US consumer survey report (2019), 101 US Supreme Court, 2 Virginia tobacco, 11–12 Virtual betting, 59 Welfare society model, 59 Wet Kansspelen Op Afstand (KOA), 76 Whilst sampling bias, 163–164 WHO, 45, 179 WHO/Lancet/UNICEF commission, 174 Women, 150–151 Women sports bettors, 155–158 relationship between harms and, 158–159 Yahoo plus , 111–112 Yahoo yahoo , 112 Young adults, 91 Young gamblers in Nigeria, 119 Young Nigerians concepts developed from study, 122–123 ethical consideration, 113–114 folk religion and gambling systematised in Nigeria, 120–122 folk religion and sports betting in Nigeria, 111–112 gamblers, 122–123 method, 113–115 realities of folk religion in gambling among, 116–117 results, 114–115 sampling, 113 site selection, 113 Young people, 177 determinants of sports betting among young people and relationship with gender, 149–150 marketing in normalisation of gambling for, 175–178 normalisation of gambling for, 174–178 support for action, 178 Youth gamblers, 112 Youth gambling, 91–92 Youth sport, 80 Zero taxes, 132–134 Book Chapters Prelims Introduction: Towards a Sociology of Sports Gambling Chapter 1 Historicising Sports Gambling Chapter 2 Brand Engagement in a Digital Age: Marketing Gambling to Newcastle United Fans Chapter 3 Data Ownership, Athlete Rights and the Global Sports Gambling Industry Chapter 4 The Production of Horse Racing in the Nordics Chapter 5 Integrity Matters: Denormalising Gambling in Belgian and Dutch Sports Clubs Chapter 6 Football Betting Among University Students in Ghana Chapter 7 Conceptualising the Normalisation of Folk Religion in the Sports Betting Practices of Young Nigerians Chapter 8 Where You Stand: Trust and Fixing in the Asian Sports Gambling Market Chapter 9 Young Women Sports Bettors in the United Kingdom: An Overlooked Demographic? Chapter 10 The Impact of Marketing on the Normalisation of Gambling and Sport for Children and Young People Afterword: Sociological Reflections on Gambling, Sport and Power Index

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