A platform for change-leaders to engage in strategic intervention towards assuring a zero tolerance for racism in all aspects of global sport. Comprising public discussions and targeted activities to ensure a healthy working and entertainment environment free of racial prejudice, abuse, and discrimination.
Sport is often referred to as a microcosm of society. Matters of race and equitable treatment arise in society, as well as in sport. The public nature of sport tends to reflect as well as amplify societal issues, often in visible and dramatic form. This makes necessary that these issues are dealt with in public fashion as well as seen publicly as being dealt with.
It is also imperative that sport exercises its advantage over society with its ability to design and deploy zero-tolerance measures to racism. This is the task at hand.
In his 1999 book, ‘Development as Freedom’, Amartya Sen, the economist, and Nobel Prize laureate talks about the importance “of public discussion as a vehicle for social change and economic progress”.
An opportunity exists for leaders in global sport to publicly take the lead in bringing clarity to these matters, and to point a direction for society. Problem solving is at the core of what leaders exist to do and the various leaders of the global sporting industry need to ensure that practitioners and consumers of sport alike feel that due attention and care is being paid to these matters.
A lot is being done by various sport bodies and organizations with internal discussions and announced initiatives, but there is a strong public perception that not enough is being done to confront and address these issues. This lack of public trust greatly erodes the integrity of the work of leaders, as well as the entertainment and integrity value of sport itself.
Until now, there has never been a forum for public discussion where leaders within the sports world gather to discuss issues critical to their industry. The ‘Race and Equity in Global Sport: The Change Leader’s Summit’, will do just that, gathering critical stakeholders and voices to bring action and justice to bear on achieving a zero tolerance for racism- an insidious, malignant and systemic social evil.
The Summits themselves will be yearly bookends in between which will be a constant program and advocacy on main points to advance the stated objective of achieving a zero tolerance for:
Engagement to advance the symbolism. Division between sports players even within black ones is itself divisive. There has to be a considered consensus actions which are not divisive
The Right Honourable the Lord Hain of Heath has been Secretary
of State for Northern Ireland and twice Secretary of State for Wales. He negotiated the 2007 settlement to end the conflict in Northern Ireland and was a Foreign Minister with successive responsibilities for Africa, the Middle East and Europe.
He was a British leader of the anti-apartheid movement and the architect of a militant direct action that brought apartheid sports to its knees, depriving South Africans of any international competition in cricket and rugby in the five decades leading up to democracy in 1994. He is the vice-chairman of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Formula One.
An Equality Advisor to the Board of the English Premier League, as well as a Non-Executive Board member at both the Guy’s & St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, and the London Metropolitan Police. Paul is a former partner at PwC, and a former member of PwC’s Executive Board.
A former Group Vice President of Unilever China, Executive Vice President of Unilever Namca, and Executive Vice President of Unilever Africa. After leaving Unilever, Frank acts as investment advisor and investor for large-scale agro and food enterprises on the African continent.
Served as the Director of Player Personnel for the the Dallas Mavericks and then NBA Vice President in charge of international affairs and Africa.
He is currently President of the Basketball Africa Basketball League- an NBA affiliated league operating in Africa.
Sanjay is the Chair of Kick It Out, football’s equality and inclusion charity, and a public commentator and recognised thought leader on issues related to discrimination and equality. He is also a Board member at the Lawn Tennis Association and Greater Sport (the Local Active Partnership for Greater Manchester) and is part of the Government-sponsored Parker review into the ethnic diversity of UK boards (focusing on FTSE 100 and FTSE 250 companies). Sanjay was also for four years a member of the Premier League’s Equality Standard Independent Panel. Sanjay was a Partner at international consultancy business EY where he was also the partner sponsor for award winning race strategies. Sanjay is a Board Member at the law firm Travers Smith and the Serious Fraud Office. He is also Chair of the Satellite Applications Catapult which acts as a hub for innovation in the UK space technology industry.
A Dutch professional football manager and former player. Clarence is considered one of the most successful players in UEFA Champions League history- he is the first, and currently the only, player to have won the Champions League with three clubs – of his four UEFA trophies.
At international level, he represented the Netherlands with 87 caps, taking part at three UEFA European Football Championships and the 1998 FIFA World Cup. Regarded by many as one of the best midfielders of his generation, in 2004, he was chosen by Pel as part of the FIFA 100.
Honorary Professor in History and Heritage Studies at the University of the Western Cape. A former firstclass cricketer and anti-apartheid activist, he is author or co-author of a dozen books on the social history of sport and the history of the liberation struggle in South Africa. Odendaal was the only white first-class cricketer to play with black cricketers during the apartheid era in South Africa.
He is a former chief executive, Western Province Cricket Association, South Africa.
Founder at Ase Creates, a ‘do-tank’, which seeks ‘to advance the African agenda and take it to places where it has never been, and otherwise would not go’.
Dipo is a former journalist turned entrepreneur. His company works in the oil and gas sector.
A British author who writes about sports “from an anthropological perspective. He has written on cricket occasionally, with articles on cricket in the Netherlands and cricket in apartheid South Africa.
Simon is also one of the world’s leading writers on soccer and is a winner of the William Hill Prize for sports book of the year in Britain. He is a sports columnist at the Financial Times newspaper.