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1:
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Front page
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Sports editor Jens Weinreich from Berliner Zeitung during a debate on governance in FIFA
Photo: Niels Nyholm
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Page 2:
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Editorial
Rescuing sport from itself
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Page 3:
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Soccer slavery
A Belgian senator has declared war on illegal trade with young talent
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Page
4-5:
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Fixers threaten the game
Match fixing is growing at the cost of sport's credibility
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Page
6-7:
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FIFA under fire
Investigative journalists pose questions FIFA won't answer
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Page
8-9:
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Clearing Kenya
Corrupt leaders are losing the battle about Kenyan soccer
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Page
10-11:
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Fans in charge
Supporters' trusts gain influence, adding value to soccer clubs
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Page
12-13:
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Blowing the whistle
Former FIFA boss Zen-ruffinen asks legislators to help, and Kenya's anti-coruption czars urges sport to show leadership
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Page
14-15:
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Volleygate
FIVB exposed as a showcase og sports korruption
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Page
16-17:
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To speak or not to speak
Volleyball leaders fear to speak out - except an Argentine who got his reward
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Page
18-19:
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Statement for integrity
A tool for countering corruption made by experts at Play the Game
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Page 20:
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Honesty test
How the soccer magazine - When Saturday Comes - reported by Play the Game
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Page 21:
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Abusive male culture
Laura Robinson draw parallels between war crimes and sports abuse
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Page
22-24:
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Sport's best friends
Global survey shows that sports leaders can count on the help of the press
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Page 25:
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Journalist on death row
Burmas's Zaw Thet Htwe barely suvived exposing sorruption in soccer
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Page
26-27:
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Stabbed after criticim
Greek sports editor Syrigos and two colleges have suffered grave attacks without any protests from aythorities
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Page
28-29:
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Waking up the US
How the BALCO affair changed the US doping landscape
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Page
30-31:
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A life under suspicion
Kelli White and Joachim B. Olsen accept that athletes live under a regimen of control
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Page
32-33:
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Global progress with gaps
WADA and UNESCO lead the progress in anti-doping, but many nations lack behind
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Page
34-35:
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Gansters dominate doping market
The illegal doping trade is taken over by organised crime, warns expert Sandro Donati
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Page 36:
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Mapping the black market
A german reasearch project maps the drug trade and educates the young
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Page 37:
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License to run
Canadian Indians and actors took lifelong sports exploitation on stage
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Page 38:
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Men and musles
Eating disorders among steroid users are seldom recognised
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Page 39:
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Global disorder
Why can Scotland be a soccer nation and Zanzibar not?
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Page
40-41:
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UN in action
Former Swiss President Ogi fights for sport as a development tool
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Page
42-43:
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Olympic games at sea
Experts diagree on the value of megaevents to society and a professor suggests floating stadiums
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Page
44-45:
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Learning from Beijing
Will the Olympics change China or China change the Olympics?
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Page 46:
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Values at risk
We are all stakeholders in sport, said Danish Minister and WADA Vice President
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Page 47:
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Fact sheet
Play the Game at a glance: Goals, donors, partners and other facts
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Click here to get the entire magazine, pp 1-47 = 1 MB
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