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1 - The development of principles relating to anti-doping regimes: the role of the Court of Arbitration for Sport

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 June 2009

Paul David
Affiliation:
Eldon Chambers, Auckland NZ
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Summary

Background

Disqualification and the imposition of disciplinary sanctions as a response to the offence of doping has been a part of the sporting world for many years. From the 1970s onwards, most sporting bodies, at both national and international level, had rules under which their members submitted to drug testing, and to the imposition of sanctions (primarily in the form of the disqualification of results and a period of ineligibility for competition) in the event that they were found to have committed a violation of the rules. To a significant degree, doping was regulated internationally by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) the body which leads and manages the Olympic movement. The Olympic Movement Anti-Doping Code (OMADC) which was produced by the IOC, was applicable to ‘the Olympic Games, the various championships to which the IOC granted its patronage and to all sports practised within the context of the Olympic Movement, including pre-competition preparation periods’. The OMADC was the forerunner of the WADA Code and many of the substantive features of the OMADC are taken up by the Code.

OMADC

The IOC anti-doping rules were amended and refined over the years. OMADC 1999, which came into force on 1 January 2000, contained many of the elements which are now found in the WADA Code and the International Standards.

Type
Chapter
Information
A Guide to the World Anti-Doping Code
A Fight for the Spirit of Sport
, pp. 13 - 39
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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