%0 Thesis %A Tan, Tien-Chin %D 2014 %T Chinese sports policy and globalisation: the case of the Olympic movement, elite football and elite basketball %U https://repository.lboro.ac.uk/articles/thesis/Chinese_sports_policy_and_globalisation_the_case_of_the_Olympic_movement_elite_football_and_elite_basketball/9609017 %2 https://repository.lboro.ac.uk/ndownloader/files/17255675 %K Globalisation %K Commercialisation %K Sport policy %K Olympic movement %K Football %K Basketball %K China %K Medical and Health Sciences not elsewhere classified %X This thesis seeks to analyse to what extent, in what ways and with what success does the Chinese government seek to manage its interaction with sport globalisation in Olympic Movement, football and basketball? Held et al's (1999) conceptualisation of globalisation provides the major theoretical framework for the analysis. In order to analyse the behaviour of the Chinese state we adopt Houlihan's (1994) concepts of 'reach' and 'response' which focus attention on global actors and pressures external to the country and state (reach) and the capacity of states to determine their response. A set of quantitative and qualitative indicators of globalisation have been identified. Data were collected from a number of sources including official government documents, news media, and a series of 32 interviews with Chinese officials. The analysis reveals that the Chinese government has demonstrated a desire and a capacity to manage the impact of the Olympic Movement, global football and basketball on domestic sport practices; and second, the Chinese government has attempted, with reasonable success, to manage the impact of commercial interests on Chinese domestic football, basketball and other Olympic sports practices, elite athletes and professional clubs. However, a number of tensions exist: first, between the priorities of commercial clubs and national teams' development; and second, between the highly paid and internationally mobile 'star players' and the centrally controlled elite development system. %I Loughborough University