Tracking citations isn’t the easiest thing to do, but when I find them, I’ll try to put them here. Thanks to those who cite. For those who don’t, you’re not doing your job properly.
MULTIPLE
- Plymire, D. C. (2009). “Remediating football for the posthuman future: embodiment and subjectivity in sport video games.” Sociology of Sport Journal 26: 17-30.
- Ryall, Emily. “The Language of Genetic Technology: Metaphor and Media Representation.” Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies 22, no. 3 (2008): 363-73
- Select Committee on Science and Technology (2007) Human Enhancement Technologies in Sport.
- Levine, B. D. (2006). “Editorial: Should ‘Artificial’ High Altitude Environments Be Considered Doping?” Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports 16: 297-301.
- Elliott, C. (2005). “Adventure! Comedy! Tragedy! Robots! How bioethicists learned to stop worrying and embrace their inner cyborgs.” Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 1(1): 18-23.
BOOKS
Miah, A. (ed.) (2008) Human Futures: Art in an Age of Uncertainty, FACT & Liverpool University Press.
Academic Citations/Reviews
- Frood, Arran. “The Future Is Now: Book Review of Human Futures: Art in an Age of Uncertainty.” Nature 457, 22 January (2009): 383-4.
Miah, A. & Rich, E. (2008) The Medicalization of Cyberspace (London and NY: Routledge).
Academic Citations/Reviews
- Nayar, P. (2010) An Introduction to New Media and Cybercultures. Oxford: Blackwell.
- 2009. Book Review: The Medicalization of Cyberspace, Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society.
- McMillon, S. (2009) Book Review: The Medicalization of Cyberspace, New Media and Society, 11, 463-4.
- Scott, K. (2008) Book Review: The Medicalization of Cyberspace, Studies in Ethics, Law and Technology, 2(3), 1-3.
- Williams, Simon.J., J. Gabe, and Peter. Davis. “The Sociology of Pharmaceuticals: Progress and Prospects.” Sociology of Health and Illness 30, no. 6 (2008): 813-24.
- Mitchell, Lisa. M. “Book Review: The Medicalization of Cyberspace.” Surveillance and Society 6, no. 2 (2009): 182-83.
- Rubinelli, S. “Book Review: The Medicalization of Cyberspace.” Body & Society 15, no. 1 (2009): 109-12.
- Campion, E.W. “Book Review: The Medicalization of Cyberspace.” New England Journal of Medicine 359, no. 19 (2008): 2074.
- James, M. “Book Review: The Medicalization of Cyberspace.” BioCentre (2008): http://www.bioethics.ac.uk.
Miah, A. (2004) Genetically Modified Athletes: Biomedical Ethics, Gene Doping and Sport (London and NY: Routledge).
Academic Citations/Reviews
- Mazanov, J. (2009). “Without bounds: A cosmopolitan research agenda for drugs in sport.” Sport in Society 12(3): 411 – 422.
- Mazanov, J. (2009). “Debating the role of drugs in sport: a reader.” Sport in Society 12(3): 296 – 312.
- Mazanov, J. and V. McDermott (2009). “The case for a social science of drugs in sport.” Sport in Society 12(3): 276 – 295.
- McNamee, M.J. (2008) Sports, Virtues and Vices. Oxon and New York, Routledge.
- Kious, B. M. (2008). “Philosophy on Steroids: why the anti-doping position could use a little enhancement.” Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 29: 213-234.
- Stein, D.J. (2008) Philosophy of Psychopharmacology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p.118.
- More, Pete. (2008) Enhancing Me: The Hope and the Hype of Human Enhancement (Science Museum TechKnow Series), John Wiley & Sons, p.249.
- Christian Lenk, Nils Hoppe & Roberto Andorno (2007) Ethics and Law of Intellectual Property: Current Problems in Politics, Science and Technology (Applied Legal Philosophy), Ashgate, p.84.
- Heinemann Educational Publishers (2007) Perspectives on Science: The History, Philosophy and Ethics of Science.
- Kok, F. (2007) Personalized Nutrition: Principles and Applications, p.167.
- Green R.M. (2007) Babies by Design: The Ethics of Genetic Choice. New Haven: Yale University Press.
- Petróczi, A. (2007). “Attitudes and doping: a structural equation analysis of the relationship between athletes’ attitudes, sport orientation and doping behaviour Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy 2(34): doi:10.1186/1747-597X-2-34.
- Davids, K. and J. Baker (2007). “Genes, Environment and Sport Performance: Why the Nature-Nurture Dualism is no Longer Relevant.” Sports Medicine 37(11): 961-980.
- Mitchell, C. B., E. D. Pellegrino, et al. (2007). Biotechnology and the Human Good. Washington, DC., Georgetown University Press.
- TWINE, R. (2007) Thinking across species – a critical bioethics approach to enhancement. Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics, 28, 509-523.
- D’ANDREA, A. C. (2006) Federalizing Bioethics. Texas Law Review, 83, 1663.
- Houlihan, B.M.J. (2006) GMA Review, European Physical Education Review, 12(3), 382-384.
- Foddy, B. (2006), ‘The ethics of genetic testing in sport’, International SportsMed Journal, 7, 3, 216-224.
- Cavanagh, S. L. and H. Sykes (2006). “Transsexual Bodies at the Olympics: The International Olympic Committee’s Policy on Transsexual Athletes at the 2004 Athens Summer Games.”
Body & Society 12(3): 75-102. - Parks, J. B., J. Quarterman, et al., Eds. (2006). Contemporary Sport Management (Third Edition). Champaign, IL., Human Kinetics.
- Sheridan, H., B. Pasveer, et al. (2006). “Gene-Talk and Sport-Talk: A View from the Radical Middle Ground.” European Journal of Sport Science 6(4): 223-230.
- Culbertson, L. (2006). “Book Review: Genetically Modified Athletes.” Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 33(1).
- Tamburrini, C. (2006). “Are Doping Sanctions Justified? A Moral Relativistic View.” Sport in Society 9(2): 199-211.
- Atkinson, M. (2006). “Book Review: Genetically Modified Athletes.” Sport in Society 9(1): 172-175.
- Shanks, Pete. (2005) Human Genetic Engineering: A Guide for Activists, Skeptics and the Very Perplexed, Nation Books.
- Moates, A. (2005). “Sports Medicine and Ethics.” Chisholm Health Ethics Bulletin 11(2): 6-9.
- Pincock, S. (2005). “Gene Doping.” The Lancet: Special Supplement on Sport and Medicine 366(S18-S19).
- Belyaletdinov, R.R. (2005) Divnyi novyi sport (Brave New Sports), Chelovek, #5, 169-173 [Russian Academy of Science]
- Jonsson, Kutte. (2005) Cyborgatleterna äh här?! Om genus, “genfuskare” och idrottens hybrider, Idrottsforum, 1-13.
- Ellliott, C. (2005) The Soul of a New Machine: Bioethicists in the Bureaucracy,
Cambridge Quarterly for Healthcare Ethics; 14:4. 379-384. - Ian Ritchie (2005) Book Review.” Sociology of Sport Journal, 22, 239-241.
- Osborn, G. (2005). Uphill race for GM sprinters? Book Review. Times Higher Education Supplement. London: 24.
- Cutter, A. M. (2005). “Book Review.” Genomics, Society and Policy 1(2): 94-96.
- Festeu, D. (2005) Book Review, GMA, European Sport Management Quarterly, 5(1), 95-97.
- Cashmore, E. (2005) Making Sense of Sports. London & New York: Routledge
- Donais, M. (2005) Book Review, Yale Journal of Public Health
- Pederson, I. K. (2005). “Book Review.” Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports 15: 65-66.
- Jönsson, K. (2004). “Genetiskt modifierade idrottare.” Idrottsforum 26 October: http://idrottsforum.org/reviews/items/jonkut_gma.html.
- Hilvoorde, Ivo van. (2004) Topsport en gendoping. Grenzen aan sport, opsporing en geloofwaardigheid. In Krisis. Tijdschrift voor empirische filosofie, 5(4), 5-21.
- Ozyener, F. (2004). “Book Review:.” Journal of Sports Science and Medicine 3: 197.
- Hosta, M. (2004). “Book Review of Genetically Modified Athletes.” Druzboslovne Razprave 20(46).
- Turner, L. (2004, August 13). Book Review: Ready, Steady…Modify, The Lancet 364:9434, pp.573-4.
- Tooby-Smith, A. (13 July, 2004) Gene Doping, British Association of Sports Medicine Today, 2.
- McNamee, M. J. (2004). “Philosophy of Sport.” Nursing Philosophy 5(2): 182-183.
- Córdova, M. Á. (2004). ATLETAS TRANSGÉNICOS: ¿MITO O REALIDAD? Presente: Diario Del Sureste. Mexico: http://www.diariopresente.com.mx/Portal/ArticleView.php?article_id=9919
Miah, A. and Eassom, S.B. (2002) Sport Technology: History, Philosophy and Policy. Oxford: Elsevier.
- Jonsson, Kutte. (2005) Cyborgatleterna äh här?! Om genus, “genfuskare” och idrottens hybrider, Idrottsforum, 1-13.
- Bale, J. (2004) Racing in Time and Space. London & New York: Routledge
REFEREED JOURNAL ARTICLES
Miah, A. (2006) Rethinking Enhancement in Sport, in Bainbridge, W.S. and M.C. Roco Progress in Convergence, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Vol, 1093, pp.301-320.
- Baoutina, A., I. E. Alexander, et al. (2007). “Potential Use of Gene Transfer in Athletic Performance Enhancement.” Molecular Therapy 15(10): 1751-1766.
- Kiuru, M. and R. G. Crystal (2008). “Progress and prospects: gene therapy for performance and appearance enhancement.” Gene Therapy (Nature Publishing Group) 14: 329-337.
- Jonsson, Kutte. (2005) Cyborgatleterna äh här?! Om genus, “genfuskare” och idrottens hybrider, Idrottsforum, 1-13.
Miah, A. “Book Review: Cybertypes: Race, Ethnicity, and Identity on the Internet by Lisa Nakamura, London and New York: Routledge (2002).” Media, Culture & Society 27, no. 1 (2005): 145-47.
- Oates, Thomas. Patrick. “Remediating Football for the Posthuman Future: Embodiment and Subjectivity in Sport Video Games.” Sociology of Sport Journal 26, no. 1 (2009): 17-30.
Kayser, B., A. Mauron, et al. (2005). “Legalisation of performance-enhancing drugs.” The Lancet 366(Supplement on Medicine and Sport): 21.
- Kious, B. M. (2008). “Philosophy on Steroids: why the anti-doping position could use a little enhancement.” Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 29: 213-234.
- Wolbring, G. “Oscar Pistorius and the Future Nature of Olympic, Paralympic and Other Sports.” ScriptEd 5, no. 1 (2008): 139-60
- Baker, J. S., M. R. Graham, et al. (2006). “Steroid and prescription medicine abuse in the health and fitness community: a regional study.” European Journal of Internal Medicine 17: 479-484.
Miah, A. (2005). “Genetics, cyberspace and bioethics: why not a public engagement with ethics?” Public Understanding of Science 14(4): 409-421.
- Moore, A. (2009). “Public Bioethics and Public Engagement: the politics of ‘proper talk’.” Public Understanding of Science.
- Hemphill, D. (2009). “Performance enhancement and drug control in sport: ethical considerations.” Sport in Society 12(3): 313 – 326.
- Ahmad, Rana., Jennifer. Bailey, and Peter. Danielson. (2008): “Analysis of an Innovative Surgery Platform: Comparison of the Public’s Responses to Human Health and Salmon Genomics Surveys.” Public Understanding of Science 1, no.1-11.
- Peters, H. P., J. T. Lang, et al. (2007). “Culture and Technological Innovation: Impact of Institutional Trust and Appreciation of Nature on Attitudes towards Food Biotechnology in the USA and Germany.” Int J Public Opin Res %R 10.1093/ijpor/edm004 19(2): 191-220.
- Koolstra CM, Bos MJW, Vermeulen IE. Through which medium should science information professionals communicate with the public: television or the internet? Journal of Science Communication 2006;5(3):1-8.
- Park, Y.-S. and C.-J. Kim (2006). ‘The Opportunity of Scientific Argumentation in the Classroom: Claim-Evidence Approach.’
- Rich, E. and J. Evans (2005). “‘Fat Ethics’ – the Obesity Discourse and Body Politics.” Social Theory and Health 3(4): 341-358
Miah, A. (2005) From Anti-Doping to a ‘Performance Policy’: Sport Technology, Being Human and Doing Ethics, European Journal of Sport Science, 5(1): 51-57 [ISSN: 1746-1391].
- Mazanov, J. and V. McDermott (2009). “The case for a social science of drugs in sport.” Sport in Society 12(3): 276 – 295.
- Oates, Thomas. Patrick. “Remediating Football for the Posthuman Future: Embodiment and Subjectivity in Sport Video Games.” Sociology of Sport Journal 26, no. 1 (2009): 17-30
- Wolbring, G. “Oscar Pistorius and the Future Nature of Olympic, Paralympic and Other Sports.” ScriptEd 5, no. 1 (2008): 139-60
Miah, A. (2003) Be Very Afraid: Cyborg Athletes, Transhuman Ideals & Posthumanity, Journal of Evolution & Technology, 13(2)
- Pilon, A. F. (2008). “The Bubbles or the Boiling Pot? An Ecosystemic Approach to Culture, Environment and Quality of Life.” Environmental Geology 57(2): 337-345.
- Hamilton, M. (2006). “Elective Performance Enhancement Surgery for Athletes: Should it be resisted?” Acta Univ. Palacki Olomuc, Gymn 36(2): 39-46
- PILON, A. F. (2006) Building a better world: the ecosystem approach to quality of life. Revista Brasileira em Promoção da Saúde, 19, 100-112.
- Jonsson, Kutte. (2005) Cyborgatleterna äh här?! Om genus, “genfuskare” och idrottens hybrider, Idrottsforum, 1-13.
- Pethokoukis, J.M. (2003, October 30) Boosting Athletic Performance, USNews.com, Next News: Daily Exploration of Science and Technology: http://www.usnews.com/usnews/nycu/tech/nextnews/archive/next031030.htm
- Editorial (2004). Filosoof Andy Miah: Frankenrunner verdient een lintje. Ergogenics: http://www.ergogenics.org/miah.html
Miah, A. (2003) Dead Bodies for the Masses: The British Public Autopsy & the Aftermath, CTHEORY
- Flågan, A. (2003) Posterchild for the Future: Living with Michael Jackson, CTHEORY, http://www.ctheory.net/text_file.asp?pick=370
- Course Reading List: Theater und Internet & Die Digitale Arena, Institute for Applied Theatre Studies, Giessen University, Dr Reinhold Grether. Link: http://www.netzwissenschaft.de/perfb.htm
Miah, A. (2002). Immersion and Abstraction in Virtual Sport. Sport Technology: History, Philosophy & Policy. A. Miah and S. B. Eassom. Oxford, Elsevier. 21: 225-233.
- Hutchins, Brett, David Rowe, and Andy Ruddock. “”It’s Fantasy Football Made Real”: Networked Media Sport, the Internet, and the Hybrid Reality of Myfootballclub.” Sociology of Sport Journal 26, no. 1 (2009): 89-106.
- Crawford, Garry, and Victoria. K. Gosling. “More Than a Game: Sports-Themed Video Games and Player Narratives.” Sociology of Sport Journal 26, no. 1 (2009): 50-66.
- Leonard, David. J. “New Media and Global Sporting Cultures: Moving Beyond the Cliches and Binaries.” Sociology of Sport Journal 26, no. 1 (2009): 1-16.
- Raney, A.A. & Bryan, J. (2006) Handbook of Sports and Media. Routledge.
- Leonard, D. (2006). An Untapped Field: Exploring the World of Virtual Sports Gaming. Handbook of Sports & Media. A. A. Raney and J. Bryant. Oxon and New York, Routledge: 393-408.
Garcia, B. & Miah, A. (2002) Hosting Major Events: Lessons from Salt Lake 2002, Culture @ the Olympics, 4(1), 1-3.
- Rennen, W. (2007). CityEvents: Place Selling in a Media Age. Amsterdam, Amsterdam University Press.
Miah, A. and S. B. Eassom, Eds. (2002). Sport Technology: History, Philosophy & Policy. Research in Philosophy & Technology. Oxford, Elsevier Science.
- Bartlett, R., C. Gratton, et al., Eds. (2005). Encyclopedia of International Sports Studies (volume 2). London & New York, Routledge.
Miah, A. (2002) Bioethics, Sport and The Genetically Enhanced Athlete. Journal For Medical Ethics and Bioethics. 9:3-4: p. 2, p. 4
- Boone, T. (2004). “Cheating in Sports: What Should Exercise Physiologists Think?” Professionalization of Exercise Physiology 7(7): http://www.css.edu/users/tboone2/asep/CheatingWhatExercisePhysiologistsThink.html
- Boone, T. (2004). “The Problem of Ambition Over Professionalism.” American Society of Exercise Physiologists 9(7).
Miah, A. (Mar, 2001) Genetic Technologies and Sport: The New Ethical Issue, Journal of the Philosophy of Sport, XXVIII, 32-52.
- Wolbring, G. “Oscar Pistorius and the Future Nature of Olympic, Paralympic and Other Sports.” ScriptEd 5, no. 1 (2008): 139-60.
- Hamilton, M. (2006). “Elective Performance Enhancement Surgery for Athletes: Should it be resisted?” Acta Univ. Palacki Olomuc, Gymn 36(2): 39-46.
- Weaving, C. (2002) Article Review, Olympika, XI, pp.188-189.
- Loland, S. (2002) Technology in Sport – Three Ideal-typical views and their implications, Play the Game, http://www.play-the-game.org/articles/sigmund_loland/technology.html
- Loland, S. (2002) Sport Technologies – A Moral View, Research in Philosophy and Technology, Vol.21.
- Paulo, D. (2004) Human Rights in Youth Sports. London and New York: Routledge
Miah, A. (2000). “The Engineered Athlete: Human Rights in the Genetic Revolution.” Culture, Sport, Society 3(3): 25-40.
- Oates, Thomas. Patrick. “Remediating Football for the Posthuman Future: Embodiment and Subjectivity in Sport Video Games.” Sociology of Sport Journal 26, no. 1 (2009): 17-30.
- Wolbring, G. “Oscar Pistorius and the Future Nature of Olympic, Paralympic and Other Sports.” ScriptEd 5, no. 1 (2008): 139-60
- Evans, M. D. R., J. Kelley, et al. (2005). “The Ethics of Gene Therapy and Abortion: Public Opinion.” Fetal Diagnosis and Therapy 20(3): 223-234.
- Houlihan, B. M. J. (2004). “Civil Rights, Doping Control and the World Anti-Doping Code.” Sport in Society 7(3): 420-437.
Miah, A. (2000) Virtually Nothing: Re-evaluating the Significance of Cyberspace, Leisure Studies, 19:3, 211-225.
- Eid, M. (2008). On the Way to the Cyber-Arab-Culture: International Communication, Telecommunication Policies, and Democracy. Cyberculture and New Media (At the Interface/Probing the Boundaries) J. R. Francisco, Rodopi B.V.: 69-98.
- Hughey, M. W. (2008). “Virtual (Br)others and (Re)sisters: Authentic Black Fraternity and Sorority Identity on the Internet.” Journal of Contemporary Ethnography 37(5): 528-560.
- Brown Jr, J. J. (2008). “From Friday to Sunday: The hacker ethic and shifting notions of labour, leisure and intellectual property.” Leisure Studies 27(4): 395-409.
- Oates, Thomas. Patrick. “Remediating Football for the Posthuman Future: Embodiment and Subjectivity in Sport Video Games.” Sociology of Sport Journal 26, no. 1 (2009): 17-30.
- Brown, J.J. (2008) From Friday to Sunday: The Hacker Ethics and Shifting Notions of Labour, Leisure and Intellectual Property, Leisure Studies, 27(4), 395-409.
- Gilchrist, P. & Ravenscroft, N. (2008) ‘Power to the paddlers’? the Internet, governance and discipline, Leisure Studies, 27(2), 129-148.
- Nayar, P. K. (2006). Reading Culture: Theory, Praxis, Politics. London, SAGE.
- MacFadyen, L. P. (2006). “Virtual Ethnicity: The New Digitization of Place, Body, Language, and Memory.” Electronic Magazine of Multicultural Education 8(1): http://www.eastern.edu/publications/emme/2006spring/macfayden.html.
- ROBERTS, K. (2006) Leisure in Contemporary Society (Second Edition), CABI Publishing.
- Thexton, Wayne (2005, July). Review: Birgitta Qvarsell & Christoph Wulf (Eds.) (2003). Culture and Education. European Studies in Education [10 paragraphs]. Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research [On-line Journal], 6(3), Art 14. Available at: http://www.qualitative-research.net/fqs-texte/3-05/05-3-14-e.htm [Date of Access: October 15, 2005].
- Harris, D. (2004). Key Concepts in Leisure Studies. London, SAGE.
- Nauright, J. (2004). “Global games: culture, political economy and sport in the globalised world of the 21st century.” Third World Quarterly 25(7): 1325-1336.
- Young, G. (2004). “From Broadcasting to Narrowcasting to ‘Mycasting’: a newfound celebrity in Queer Internet Communities.” Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies 18(1): 43-64.
- Harris, D. (2004) Resource Guide: Leisure Consumerism and Popular Culture, HE Academy Network for Hospitality, Leisure, Sport and Tourism, Learning and Teaching Support Network (LTSN).
- Patterson, Mike. (2003) First Nations in Cyberspace: Two Worlds and Tricksters – Where the Forest meets the Highway, PhD Dissertation, Department of Sociology/Anthropology, Carlton University, Canada.
- Grosseck, Gabriela. (2003) Incursiune in ciberspatiu, Revista Informatica Economia 4(28), 9-14.
- Payne, P. (2003). “The Technics of Environmental Education.” Environmental Education Research 9(4): 525-541.
- Lawrence, L. (2003). “‘These are the voyages…’: interaction in real and virtual space environments in leisure.” Leisure Studies 22(October): 301-315.
- Rehman, L. A., L. M. Robinson, et al. (2002). Celebrating Net Gains: Transforming the Nature of Leisure. Tenth Canadian Congress on Leisure Research, University of Alberta, Canadian Association of Leisure Studies.
- Scientific Research on the Internet, University of Maryland, USA http://www.webuse.umd.edu/biblio/bib_networks.htm
- Patterson, M. (2003) First Nations in Cyberspace: Two Worlds and Tricksters, Where the Forest meets the Highway, PhD dissertation for Carlton University, Canada.
Miah, A. (2001) Genetics, Law and Athletes’ Rights, Sports Law Bulletin, Vol 4(5), pp.10-12
- Foddy, B. (2006), ‘The ethics of genetic testing in sport’, International SportsMed Journal, 7, 3, 216-224.
- Houlihan, B. M. J. (2004). “Civil Rights, Doping Control and the World Anti-Doping Code.” Sport in Society 7(3): 420-437.
- Willis, P. (2002) Gene Sport, ABC News Article, published online at: http://www.abc.net.au/catalyst/stories/s479512.htm
- Boone, T. (2004). “Cheating in Sports: What Should Exercise Physiologists Think?” Professionalization of Exercise Physiology 7(7): http://www.css.edu/users/tboone2/asep/CheatingWhatExercisePhysiologistsThink.html
Popularity: 12% [?]

wat did it look like? who cares its are things happen.
ah, well, i’m not sure about annual, but definitely 2009!
Just a quick note: I wonder if Mr Sofroniou is the same Chris Sofroniou I knew at school (Edgware Comprehensive School). We shared the same teacher in a number of classes. I cannot really make out the face too clearly in the picture.
Hi Andy,
Here’s what I read: an article in Trinidad & Tobago’s Daily Express dated 22nd December 2008 which was headlined “Gene doping – the next sporting frontier?” Your views wer prominently featured. For what it’s worth, I was very impressed with you way of thinking.
For years I have been saying that athletes who wish to take performance enhancing medications should be allowed to do so under controlled circumnstances and be made to share the benefits derived therefrom with the less fortunate – healthwise – in the wider community. If these athletes want to and agree to be human guinea pigs then that’s their right. Anyhow you take it, they will find ways to beat the traditional ways of doing things.
I admire your thinking.
Henry
Hi, just caught this on my post-Christmas podcast binge. A quality performance. I’m enjoying the book too…..James
it seems ridiculous that Michael Phelps is getting so much flak from this supposed marijuana scandal… Since when have we taken the reporting of trashy tabloids so seriously?
The style of writing is quite familiar to me. Did you write guest posts for other bloggers?
After reading this article, I just feel that I really need more information on the topic. Could you share some more resources ?
Fantastic site! i will come back again soon..
check out http://www.veryvoo.com
It’s a new site, but it has potential to grow into the social network for creative people who don’t like social networks and self-promotion, because it focuses on collaboration.
Thanks for coming down and speaking yesterday Andy – I think it inspired most people and ruffled more than a few tail feathers. I’ll be in touch very soon.:-)
- JJ
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Hi, I found your page when I was searching for websites related to article submission. I must say, your site is good. I like the design too, its pleasing. I don’t have much time at the moment to fully read your website but I have noted it and I also registered for your RSS feed. I will read again in a day or two. Thanks for such a great website!
Pretty good post. I just stumbled upon your blog and needed to say that I have genuinely enjoyed reading your blog posts. Any way, I will be signing up to receive your feed and I hope you post again very soon.
what should be legal allowed is a hard debate, after all is it not up to the individual what he or she wants?
Andy, Would love to know more about your work. Graham Jeffrey connected us – in relation to a citizen media project we’re planning in Newham. Have you been researching only, or been involved in any actual projects? Would really welcome links to research etc. For more on what we’re doing, see here – http://generalapp.newschallenge.org/SNC/ViewItem.aspx?pguid=6aee8166-fb7c-4a2e-8581-fa6f6ff036dd&itemguid=eec8e3e1-b456-4549-815f-bbb66ff54967
Jess
The thing about a beginner is that they’re eager. This is both good and bad. It’s good because they’ll put full effort into things and learn as much as they can, it’s bad because their eagerness makes them impatient! Many’s the beginner who didn’t get dramatic results in the first month and gave up because of it.
Nanotechnology in the biological field will be utilized in the form of Eugenics to ‘enhance’ those few and to rid the many of ‘undesired’ genetic traits, or it will be used for simple genocide. What other purpose can it possibly serve when most of the cures or improvements it is aiming to provide are argued to be available from natural resources being supressed? I can’t imagine humankind would benefit from such a technology, specially since most of the consumer technology to date has been used for, and proved to be, nothing more than supression/retardation/radiation poisoning of the human mind.
Not many people get to travel to three continents in the same year – well done! Congratulations on your marriage and I hope becoming a father brings you all sorts of unexpected joys! :) Do you know if it’s a girl or a boy yet?
Hey, I stumbled across your site through Msn and just wanted to say that I really like it. I’ll definitely be bookmarking it!
In the case of professional communicators, retweets (RTs) that endorse clients are usually marked as such ie Check out this great article from…+ link (client) or Interesting piece on … Link. Please RT (client). To me, most of the other tweets fall into the news category and they get to be RTed because a user has deemed them worthy to be shared.
Best to keep it simple and let the reader interpret the tweets intent. I don’t want twitter interfering in the process.
I know the background of everyone I follow respective of the Olympics and consequently know their agenda.
http://twitter.com/MauriceCardinal
I’m not sure I see what the problem is with vanity tweets. Even if one tweets information in order to be liked, the information is still passed on in the exact same way as if the poster genuinely felt strongly about the news.
What definition of vanity are we assuming? Do I actually care if the intention of an unknown person who does not punch me in the face, for example, is actually that s/he wants to be liked by my friends and not that they actually care about me? No, I simply care that I am not randomly punched in the face. It has no baring on the actual punch.
Just as the intention has no baring on the truth or falsity of the information being dispersed.
If someone spreads virtue for non-virtuous reasons, I don’t think it follows that the thing being spread is altered in its virtuousness.
I think this question is a good one for re-tweets, for sure. Not so sure how it applies for many other tweets; most of the people I follow, for example, either chat with others they’re friends will or offer up random status, their own news and articles, etc. Some of which could fall into one of the three categories you mention here, but many do not.
As far as re-tweeting goes though, I think they can fall in all three categories, either singly or all three at once, and that it’s perfectly ok to retweet for vanity’s sake. There is another re-tweet type that I’m not as comfortable with: the “please re-tweet my news/service/etc” or promotional re-tweet. I try to look at them on a case-by-case basis, but they feel inherently spammy most of the time. So maybe ad a “spam” category to the three?
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Ah yes, the scrutiny of the arm-chair heroes; those who would say that Linford only won because of drugs. Do they not recall that Linford stood at the line in Barcelona, in Stuttgart, in Paris, in Madrid, in so many places, lined up next to the very best (and probably equally doped up) and that it was his mind not his body that allowed him to win.
Linford is a ‘god’ not so much in body, but in the vastness of his understanding of what it takes for a man to let himself win, to over-come the doubt and the panic, the weak legs, the nausea, the pending sense of failure. Yet Linford did not crawl under a rock; he won the damn races for himself, his family, his culture and, yes, also for Britain.
Sorry to be so emphatic but anyone who suggests that Linford is not a true champion is an absolute fool, who know neither themselves, not what it takes to be great. I say to those people, stand up and face your own fears, and be the judge of yourself only.
Errol
I agree Andy that doping & new media activism are at the forefront of Olympic controversy. Doping has always been a challenge, but new media is the issue having the most impact on the health of the Games.
For example, Chicago lost the 2016 bid to Rio partially because the new media resistance in Chicago was so well organized, but also because in general, the sophistication of new media is less advanced in Brazil, which poses less of an ambush marketing threat to official Olympic sponsors like Coca-Cola and Visa. Granted, Brazil is a growing South American power with a stronger economy than most, but not in relation to global impact.
If I were the IOC, I’d much rather deal with Rio than Europe or America in this respect, at least until social media is more defined and the IOC has a better understanding of it. The challenge the IOC has however is similar to that of newspapers who ignored and undermined the internet for years naively believing they could eventually control it.
For the record, I’m pro-Olympics – with a Twist, which means I love the sport, but hate the politics.
I’ve cautioned traditional street protestors in Vancouver for years that the fight is no longer on the ground. It is in the Ethernet and that they are foolish to go head to head with a patriotic IOC army that is hundreds if not thousands of times their size physically and economically.
Anti-Olympic activists will never be successful in their goal to kill the Olympics. You can’t kill an institution so ingrained in society, but if they use social media properly they can help fix it. The IOC purposely polarizes anti and pro Olympic groups because it keeps people in Host communities fighting among themselves instead of finding fault with the IOC – an old Sun Tzu strategy.
Vancouver is the first Olympic city to be in such a powerful “new media” position, but alas we are not organized enough to leverage it properly to force Olympic sponsors to be more accountable respective of athletes and Host communities, which means it will be up to London 2012 to push it over the edge. Social media was almost sophisticated enough in 2008, but the secret partnership between the IOC and communist China regarding mainstream news media caught activists off guard.
The biggest mistake 2010 Vancouver made was to allow, once again, local mainstream news media to partner with the IOC. It should be illegal for an advertiser to have so much economic influence over local newspapers and television, especially when such a large part of the community trusts and mistakenly believes news media to be non partisan. Surprisingly, self titled social media experts in Vancouver don’t see bias as a problem, at least not enough to challenge the conflict of interest relationship. Many were too busy trying to figure out how they could personally benefit from the Olympics instead of helping to improve the system. They literally helped local newspapers sell out our community.
Anti-Olympic activists too were actually more concerned about seeing their names in local newspapers, which basically is a tempest in a teapot from the perspective of Olympic sponsors like McDonalds or GE, than they were about engaging the IOC on a global platform.
Olympic sponsors like Coca-Cola are not intimidated in the least by local complaints in a Host community, but they will however think much differently when complaints from Vancouver of IOC abuse ricochet around the world to future Olympic regions like London, Sochi and Rio. If the IOC can’t attract sponsors they will be forced to treat athletes and Host communities with more respect, or they will go bankrupt. Follow the money.
For new media Olympic activists to succeed they must first address the issue of the IOC partnering with local mainstream news media in Host regions. If this incestuous relationship is undermined, or ideally prohibited, the IOC’s mouthpiece is in effect gagged and a more truthful, realistic message to the community can be more easily distributed. When the IOC no longer controls the message Olympic sponsors will very seriously question whether they can risk associating their brands with an event that has a long history of harming Host communities. At the end of the day it won’t be the IOC that will take the direct hit, it will be companies like Coca-Cola. It’s not a coincidence that four TOPs Olympics sponsor bailed out last year. Kodak, Lenovo, Manulife Financial, and Johnson & Johnson all said adios to the IOC, a record number in all of Olympic history, and all but J&J did so well before the recession was an issue.
One small company in Vancouver that was bullied mercilessly by the IOC, but stood their ground was the Olympia restaurant on Denman. Their story is groundbreaking. I worked with them from the very beginning and used new media strategies to bring their fight with the IOC to a world stage. This little restaurant is a perfect example of the impact new media has on an Olympic region and the IOC.
Here’s their story
http://www.998denman.com/Page2.html
And here’s what Vancouverites think about the IOC respective of the restaurant.
http://www.olyblog.com/f/09/998Denman.shtml
Social media represents the new face of Olympic activism where the mantra is FIX IT! Instead of KILL IT!
Cheers,
Maurice Cardinal
Editor: http://www.OlyBLOG.com
Author: http://www.LeverageOlympicMomentum.com
Is there an online video of your keynote?
Can we we get copies of the papers from this event? We are the volunteers at No Games Chicago and we successfully organized to stop the 2016 Olympics from coming to our city.
Tom Tresser
Chicago
312-804-3230
tom@tresser.com