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Anglophone Africa in the Olympic Movement: the confirmation of a British wager? (1948-1962)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2022

Pascal Charitas*
Affiliation:
Univ. Paris-Sud, CIAMS Laboratory, “Sports, Politics and Social Transformations” Team, Orsay, F-91405 (France)
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Extract

In July 2010 I discovered the National Archives (Kew, London) while working on a dual project: my doctoral thesis, and a grant awarded by the Olympic Studies Centre in Lausanne, Switzerland. My goal was to conduct a comparative historical analysis of the administrative and political colonial situations of the United Kingdom and France. I wanted to understand their influence on the integration of the former British and French colonies into the Olympic movement between the end of the Second World War (1945) and the hosting of the Olympic Games in London (1948) on the one hand, and colonial independence in Africa in the 1960s on the other, reflected at the IOC by the creation of the Committee for International Olympic Aid (CIOA) to help the new countries in the Third World.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 2011

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35 Styled Lord Burghley before 1956 and also known as David Burghley or Marquess of Exeter, he was an English athlete, sports official and Conservative party politician. Lord Burghley was a member of the IOC (1905-1981) and took part as an athlete in the hurdles at the Commonwealth Games (1930), the English championships and the Olympic Games. He was President of the Amateur Athletic Association (1936-1976), President of the British Olympic Committee (1936-1966) and the Organising Committee for the Games of t h e XlVth Olympia (London, 1948), Controller of Repairs, Equipment and Overseas Supplies in t he British Air Commission (1941-1943), Governor and Commander-in-Chief of Bermuda (1943-1945) and President of the British Commonwealth Chamber of Commerce (1952-1964).

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