Panathlon International Explained

Panathlon International
Type:Sports organization
Formation:1960
Headquarters:Rapallo
Leader Title:President
Leader Name: Pierre Zappelli
Language:English, French
Website:panathlon-international.org

Panathlon International (PI) is a global umbrella organization of "Panathlon clubs", which are nonprofit non-governmental organizations promoting sports ethics and fair play and opposing discrimination and politicisation in sport. Panathalon International is recognized by the International Olympic Committee (IOC).[1] It is a member of the International Fair Play Committee (CIFP),[2] and associate member of the Global Association of International Sports Federations.

The name "Panathlon" is from Greek Greek, Modern (1453-);: pan "all" + Greek, Modern (1453-);: athlon "sport".[3]

PI has more than 300 clubs in 30 countries in 4 continents, with a head office in Rapallo, Italy. As well as promotional work, PI and its members support research on topics concerning sport and its relations with society.[4]

History

The first club was created on 12 June 1951 in Venice by Mario Viali of the Italian National Olympic Committee and some friends,[5] mostly members of the local Rotary Club.[6] Ludovico Foscari coined the name "Panathlon" and the motto Latin: ludis iungit, Latin for .

In 1953 seven clubs formed the Italian Panathlon Association.[7] In 1960 Panathlon International was formed by members from Italy, Switzerland, Spain, and France.

, there is no Panathlon International club in the United Kingdom.[8] On that date PI met with the Panathlon Foundation, a UK charity promoting youth disabled sports, to discuss co-operation to enable a UK PI club to use the name "Panathlon".

Goals

As an independent organization, Panathlon aims at:

Actions

Panathlon's actions on integrity in sport have been fueled by the fact that sport is often beset by poor practice, corruption, and harmful behaviors. Sport has to remain credible and must be continuously proactive if it wants to sustain its positive values. Panathlon is therefore considering what should be done to ensure that the positive potential of sport can prevail in the complex commercialized and globalized sporting landscape of the 21st century. Its position is that it would be naïve to think that sport automatically elicits and promotes positive effects and that remaining silent on obvious aberrations would condone complicity.

A modern integrity management framework aims at preventing serious integrity violations on the one hand (rules-based approach), and promoting integrity through stimulating understanding commitment and capacity for ethical decision-making. On the other hand, PI demonstrates a "values-based approach." To direct its actions, Panathlon International adopts the "values-based approach" which is about supporting and stimulating (code of ethics) and limits itself to stimulate sports federations and sports authorities to address controlling and sanctioning (code of ethics). The Panathlon Declaration of Ethics in Youth Sports adopted by UNICEF, the IOC, SportAccord, international federations (FIFA, UCI, IAAF, FIBA, FIG and others), organizations (ENGSO, EUPEA and others) as well as National Olympic Committees (Belgium, Netherlands, Uruguay and others) exemplifies this "values-based approach."

Presidents

No.NameYears
1 1955–1957
2 1957–1968
3 1968–1972
4 1972–1976
5 1976–1977
6 1977–1988
7 1988–1996
8 Vittorio Adorni1996–2004
9 2004–2012
10 2012–2016
11 2016-

Flambeau d'Or

The Flambeau d'Or (Golden Torch) is an award that is presented every four years. It aims to reward distinguished international sports personalities. It is awarded in three categories for outstanding achievements in sport promotion, sport culture and organisation.[9]

Past Winners! Year! Promotion! Culture! Organisation
1972
1976 Juan Antonio Samaranch
1980 Beppe Croce
1984 Mario Vazquez Rana
1988 Anselmo Lopez
1992 Pasqual Maragall y Mira
1996 Gerhard Heiberg
2000 Michael Knight
2004 Sergey Bubka[10] Bruno Grandi[11] Gianna Angelopoulos-Daskalaki
2008 [12] Hein Verbruggen

References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.olympic.org/ioc-governance-affiliate-organisations IOC recognized organisations
  2. Web site: CIFP Members – Ordinary Members . International Fair Play Committee . 4 January 2020 . en . 4 November 2015.
  3. Book: Harvey, S. . Light . R. . Ethics in Youth Sport: Policy and Pedagogical Applications . Routledge . Ethics in Youth Sport: Policy and Pedagogical Applications . 2013 . 978-0-415-67903-9 . 14 August 2024 . 3.
  4. Book: Vanden Auweele, Y. . Joy and pain in sport: Disillusionment and sadness, but also hope and optimism . Maklu . 2022 . 978-90-466-1168-5 . 14 August 2024 . 15.
  5. Book: Aledda, A. . Bizzini . L. . Bramante . A.C. . Maes . M. . Parry . J. . Spallino . A. . Tamburrini . C.M. . Vanden Auweele . Y. . Vigarello . G. . Ethic and sport. Youth and manager. Etique et sport. Jeunesse et manager. Etica e sport. Giovani e manager. Proceedings of the XVI Congress of Panathlon International. Antwerp, 22-24 November 2007: Youth and manager. Etique et sport. Jeunesse et manager. Etica e sport. Giovani e manager. Proceedings of the XVI Congress of Panathlon International. Antwerp, 22-24 November 2007 . Franco Angeli Edizioni . Varie . 2008 . 978-88-464-9481-8 . la . 14 August 2024 . 193.
  6. Magi 2011 p.13
  7. Magi 2011 p.14
  8. Web site: Chiappe . Emanuela . A bridge leading towards Great Britain . www.panathlon-international.org . 4 January 2020 . en-gb.
  9. Web site: Flambeau d'Or.
  10. Web site: Sergiy Bubka receives "Golden Torch 2005" international prize . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120531161527/http://www.nrcu.gov.ua/index.php?id=148&listid=21612 . 2012-05-31.
  11. Web site: Biography.
  12. Web site: Professor Gudrun Doll-Tepper Honored with Two International Awards . 13 November 2009.