Index

Gambling and Sports in a Global Age

ISBN: 978-1-80117-305-6, eISBN: 978-1-80117-304-9

ISSN: 1476-2854

Publication date: 17 November 2023

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2023), "Index", McGee, D. and Bunn, C. (Ed.) Gambling and Sports in a Global Age (Research in the Sociology of Sport, Vol. 18), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 193-200. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1476-285420230000018013

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Darragh McGee and Christopher Bunn. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Accountability
, 84–85

Age
, 21

Aktiebolaget Trav och Galopp (ATG)
, 60, 65

Alcohol
, 94

Alleged feminisation of sports betting globally and in the United Kingdom
, 146–149

Animal welfare

issues
, 70–71

organisations
, 70–71

Ante-post auction
, 14

Anti-gamblers
, 18

Asian bookmaking company
, 132

Asian gambling companies, The
, 132–133

Asian gambling market, The
, 134, 137

Asian sports gambling market
, 131–132

fixers work
, 140–141

globalisation of corruption
, 137–140

Hill’s rule
, 139

lack of governance
, 139–140

legal and illegal markets
, 132

low vig, zero taxes and know-your customer
, 132–134

market for games
, 137–138

methods
, 130–131

relative exploitation
, 138–139

structure of illegal Asian sports gambling industry
, 134–136

Athletes
, 48–49

Australian Football League (AFL)
, 173

Aztecs
, 12

Baseball
, 20–21

Bet365 (British gambling firm)
, 1–2, 27, 48, 185, 188

BetMGM
, 2

Betting
, 146–147

companies
, 188

Betting, Gaming and Lotteries Act (1961)
, 20

Betting Houses Act (1853)
, 19–20

Betting Offices
, 20

Big Data
, 43

economy
, 50

Big Gambling
, 186, 189

Bivariable analysis
, 96

Bivariable associations
, 98–99

Bookmaking
, 21

Booming industry
, 75–76

Bovril
, 26

Boxing
, 139

Brand activation strategies
, 34–35

Brand engagement in digital age

advertising and marketing in football
, 26–27

English premier league clubs and gambling partners
, 27

evoking cultural tradition
, 30–31

findings
, 30–35

methods
, 28–29

Newcastle United and FUN88
, 28

promoting gambling and generating business globally
, 31–33

Britain’s National Lottery
, 14–15

British Select Committees
, 12–13, 18

Broadcasters
, 173

Cambridge Analytica
, 46

Casinos
, 12

Celebrity endorsements
, 177

Celestial Church of Christ
, 114–115

Charter of Player Data Rights
, 42

Children, normalisation of gambling for
, 174–178

Christian Social Council
, 18–19

Christianity
, 122

Churches Committee on Gambling
, 18–19

Class
, 21

Club fandom
, 90–91

Clubs
, 82–83

Collective Bargaining Agreement
, 42

‘Commercial determinants of health’ concept
, 186

Commodification of data
, 45–46, 51–52

Comprehensive public health approach
, 171, 178–179

Continuous control
, 189

Corruption, globalisation of
, 137–140

Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU)
, 62

COVID-19
, 64

Cricket
, 149

Cultural justifications of horse racing sectors
, 63–66

‘Cut soap for me’ phenomenon
, 120

Cutting edge technology
, 188–189

Data
, 28–29, 51

critical questions for future of data governance
, 50–53

revolution
, 6, 42–43

and societal discontents
, 43–46

Datafication

of society
, 43

of sport
, 46–50

Datafied society
, 45–46

Deconstructing gambling as ‘normal’ and ‘risk-free’ activity
, 82

Denormalising gambling
, 81

in sports clubs
, 80–84

Digital data
, 47

economy
, 46

sets
, 43

Digital gambling ecosystem
, 2

Digital products
, 59

Digital technologies
, 43, 50

Disembedded gambling
, 188–189

Dismantling gambling-related language
, 83–84

E-bay
, 132–133

EAGS, The
, 150–152

Economic pressure
, 85–86

Educational sessions
, 82

Educational strategies
, 179

Eire betting offices
, 15

Electronic gambling machines (EGMs)
, 59

Elite athletes
, 46

Emerging adult
, 151–152

English Football Association
, 18

English Premier League (EPL)
, 26

clubs and gambling partners
, 27

EU Rural Development Programme
, 59–60

European Commissioner for Consumer Protection
, 44

European contexts
, 62

European Enlightenment
, 13

European Free Trade Association (EFTA)
, 62

European Trade Agreement (ETA)
, 62

Exploratory research design
, 113

Fancy, The
, 15–16

Fetish
, 110

Fetishism
, 110

FIFA World Cup (1970)
, 32

FIFA World Cup (2018)
, 138

FIFPRO
, 42

Financial harms
, 159

Financial justifications of horse racing sectors
, 63–66

Finland
, 59

Finnish Veikkaus, The
, 63–64

Five-star system
, 140–141

Folk religion
, 110

in Nigeria
, 111–112, 120, 122

realities of folk religion in gambling among young Nigerians
, 116–117

Football
, 26–27, 90, 149

advertising and marketing in
, 26–27

banter
, 35

data
, 49–50

gamblers
, 34–35

pools
, 14–15, 20

self-reported motivations for placing football bets
, 98

talk
, 35

Football Association
, 48–49

Football betting

bivariable associations
, 98–99

data analysis
, 96

design and participants
, 93–94

measures
, 94–96

methods
, 93–96

multivariable associations
, 99–100

onset and source of initiation of
, 97

platforms
, 90

prevalence estimates
, 97

procedure
, 96

research questions
, 93

results
, 96–100

sample characteristics
, 96–97

self-reported motivations for placing football bets
, 98

French Pari Mutuel Urbain (PMU)
, 68

FUN88
, 28–29, 31–32, 34

GambleAware
, 34

‘Gamblification’ of sport
, 1, 48, 75–76, 90, 147, 185

Gambling
, 33, 53, 58, 63, 75–76, 91–92, 110–111, 119

advertising strategies
, 170–171

adverts
, 119

alignment between gambling products and promotions and sporting contexts
, 172–173

brands
, 30, 48

companies
, 42, 101–102, 185

corporations
, 188–189

dismantling gambling myths and deconstructing normalising sports cultures
, 83–84

firms
, 42–43

football and male gamblers
, 34–35

gambling-related match-fixing
, 78

and generating business
, 31–33

harms and women
, 150–151

industry
, 189–190

normalisation of gambling for children and young people
, 174–178

normalisation of gambling in sports clubs
, 77–80

partners
, 27

products
, 172

realities of folk religion in gambling among young Nigerians
, 116–117

role of marketing in normalisation of gambling for young people
, 175–178

sponsorship
, 149

systematised in Nigeria
, 120–122

Gambling Act (2005)
, 20, 27, 31–32, 48, 147–149

Gambling Commission, The
, 147, 185

Games, market for
, 137–138

Gaming
, 12

Gaming Act (1845)
, 19–20

Gaming Act (2006)
, 91–92

Gender
, 21

determinants of sports betting among young people and relationship with
, 149–150

General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
, 42, 44, 51

German-based Croatians, The
, 140

Ghana
, 91–92

Ghana Football Association (GFA)
, 137

Ghana Gaming Commission
, 91–92

Ghanaian context
, 92–93, 103–104

Glaser’s grounded theory (Glaser’s GT)
, 114

Global leisure economy
, 1–2

Global public health threat, normalisation of gambling as
, 171–172

Globalisation
, 135–136

of corruption
, 137–140

Globalised sports gambling market
, 137–138

Google
, 28–29

Google Forms
, 96

Google Scholar
, 28–29

Governance, lack of
, 139–140

Governments
, 21

Grassroots European sports clubs
, 76

Grassroots sports clubs
, 76

Gross gambling revenue (GGR)
, 61–62

Hill’s Rule
, 139

Historical justifications of horse racing sectors
, 63–66

Hong Kong Jockey Club
, 132

Horse industry
, 59–60

Horse racing
, 15–16, 57–58, 69, 71

animal and jockey welfare issues
, 70–71

costs of operation
, 66–68

data
, 61

expansion and prospects of Nordic horse racing industries
, 68

historical, cultural and financial justifications of horse racing sectors
, 63–66

impression management and justifications
, 69

income statement analysis
, 62–63

industry
, 59

limitations and suggestions for further studies
, 71

methods
, 59–63

provision
, 61

results
, 63–68

surplus for state and to sector
, 69–70

text analysis
, 61–62

Horse sector
, 58

House of Lords Select Committee on Betting in 1902
, 19–20

Human–material nexus
, 52–53

Hustling
, 112

Hyper-commodification
, 26–27

Igbominas
, 113

Illegal Asian market
, 137

Illegal Asian sports gambling industry, structure of
, 134–136

Illegal bookmakers
, 134

Illegal markets
, 132

Illegal sports gambling networks
, 136

Impression management
, 61

and justifications
, 69

Incision
, 121

Income statement analysis
, 62–63

Income statements (IS)
, 61

India’s Calcutta Turf Club Derby
, 14

Indices of Multiple Deprivation (IMD)
, 152

Inducement marketing
, 176–177

Inductive content analysis (ICA)
, 114

Industry stakeholders
, 59

Industry-funding streams
, 3

Integrity matters
, 80–84

deconstructing gambling as ‘normal’ and ‘risk-free’ activity
, 82

dismantling gambling myths and deconstructing normalising sports cultures
, 83–84

normalisation of gambling in sports clubs
, 77–80

tackling social norms and pressures
, 82–83

International Federation of Horse Racing Authorities (IFSA)
, 57–58

International sport
, 137

Internet betting
, 92–93

Internet of Things
, 45–46

Islam
, 122

Jockey Club, The
, 16

Jockey welfare issues
, 70–71

Juju
, 110

Kayan mata products
, 111–112

Kenilworth cigarettes
, 11–12

Key informants (KI)
, 113

Know-your customer
, 132–134

Knowledge
, 51–52, 122

Kwara State Bureau of Statistics, The
, 113

Ladbrokes
, 17

Lancet Commission
, 179

Landmark University Centre for Research, Innovation, and Development (LUCRID)
, 113–114

Laws
, 19

Legal inequalities
, 19

Legal markets
, 132

Legality
, 132–133

Leicester City FC
, 27

Logistic regression models
, 155

London’s White Conduit Club
, 16

Low vig
, 132–134

Low-commission business model
, 133

Luck
, 122–123

Madman Welfare
, 121

Major League Baseball (MLB)
, 42

Male gamblers
, 34–35

Market(ing)

costs
, 67–68

for games
, 137–138

role in normalisation of gambling for young people
, 175–178

strategies
, 122–123

Mass Observation study
, 15

Match–fixing
, 130

Mathematical probability
, 13

Middle-class commentators
, 18

Middle-class credit betting
, 17

Middling groups
, 17

Mobster
, 134

Moral and Social Reform Council
, 18–19

Multivariable analysis
, 96

Multivariable associations
, 99–100

Murky market
, 138

National Anti-Gambling League
, 18–19

National Lottery Authority (NLA)
, 91–92

Neoliberal capitalism
, 187–191

Newcastle United
, 28, 31

match programme
, 30

Twitter
, 28–29

Newcastle United Football Club (FC)
, 28

Nigeria

folk religion and gambling systematised in
, 120–122

folk religion and sports betting in
, 111–112

NodeXL Pro application
, 28–29

Non-gambling revenues
, 62

Nordic horse racing industries, expansion and prospects of
, 68

Normalisation

of gambling as global public health threat
, 171–172

of gambling for children and young people
, 174–178

of gambling in sports clubs
, 77–80

role of marketing in normalisation of gambling for young people
, 175–178

of sports betting globally and in United Kingdom
, 146–149

young people’s support for action
, 178

North American tribal societies
, 12

Norway
, 59

Observational learning
, 174

Online gambling
, 112

Online sports betting markets
, 75–76

Paddy Power
, 48, 188

Pari–mutuel system
, 14

Peer-to-peer betting
, 13

Peers
, 102

People’s Republic of China
, 13

Performance data
, 42–43

Personal analytics
, 45

Personnel costs
, 68

Post-industrial economies
, 187

Power
, 186

Premier League
, 42

broadcasting
, 35

club
, 80

Prevalence estimates
, 97

Problem gambling
, 3, 91

Productivity harms
, 159

Profits over earnings (P/E)
, 130–131

Project Red Card
, 42, 49–51

Public health
, 171

concern
, 147

researchers
, 170–171

Pugilistic Society, The
, 16

Qatar World Cup (2022)
, 82–83

Quantitative method
, 131

Racecourse Betting Control Act (1928)
, 20

Ready Money Football Betting Act (1920)
, 20

Relationship harms
, 159

Relative exploitation
, 138–139

Research
, 21

Responsibility
, 84–85

Responsible gambling
, 3, 7, 64, 83–84, 179

Return to players (RTP)
, 61

Rights of individuals
, 44, 51

Royal Commissions on gambling
, 12–13

Rugby
, 149

Safeguarding
, 80–81, 84–85

Sapinas
, 140

School-based gambling education programmes
, 84

Secular objections
, 18

Self-reported motivations for placing football bets
, 98

Shaggi’s testimony
, 116

Silicon Valley
, 46

Singaporean-based Chinese, The
, 140

SkyBet
, 48

Soap making
, 120, 123

Social networks
, 15–17

Social pressure
, 85–86

Social theory
, 4

Society’s acceleration
, 43–44

Socio-demographic variables
, 94

Sociological imagination
, 186–187

Sociologists
, 45

Sociology
, 4

Solitary betting
, 17

South American tribal societies
, 12

Sponsorship managers
, 26

SportRadar
, 138–139

Sports
, 13–14, 50, 75–76, 170–171, 173, 178–179, 191

datafication of
, 46–50

dismantling gambling myths and deconstructing normalising sports cultures
, 83–84

integrity
, 80–81

leagues
, 82–83

lottery
, 14, 20

organisations
, 80, 82–83

Sports betting
, 90–91, 158

change over time in sports betting systems
, 13–15

changing regulation of
, 19–21

consumption
, 188–189

in context
, 187–191

determinants of sports betting among young people and relationship with gender
, 149–150

expansion
, 190–191

in Nigeria
, 111–112

opposition to
, 17–19

rise, normalisation and alleged feminisation of sports betting globally and in United Kingdom
, 146–149

surveillance and control
, 189–190

Sports clubs
, 76, 80, 82

denormalising gambling in
, 80–84

normalisation of gambling in
, 77–80

Sports gambling
, 13, 15, 17, 189

change over time in sports betting systems
, 13–15

changing regulation of sports betting
, 19–21

class, age and gender
, 21

critical questions for future of
, 50–53

industry
, 52

opposition to sports betting
, 17–19

products
, 188

social networks and sports gambling
, 15–17

Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE)
, 93–94

Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA)
, 90, 110

Sub-Saharan African territories
, 2

Surplus for state and to sector
, 69–70

Sweden
, 57–59

Swedish market
, 14–15

Sweepstakes
, 20

tickets
, 14

Tackling Gambling Stigma project
, 163–164

Taxation
, 187–188

Technology
, 27, 43

firms
, 46

Tennis
, 138

Thematic analysis
, 29

Tradition
, 31

Traditional media
, 29, 33

Traditional oath-taking
, 111

‘Trans-local’ stadia
, 2

Triangulation
, 130–131

Trickle-down effect
, 53

Twitter
, 28–29

UEFA European Women’s Football Championship (2022)
, 34–35

UK Gambling Act (2005)
, 52–53

Unhealthy commodity goods
, 76

Unhealthy commodity industries (UCIs)
, 186

Unibet
, 2

UNICEF
, 179

United Kingdom, The
, 13, 52–53

data and methodology
, 151–152

determinants of sports betting among young people and relationship with gender
, 149–150

football pyramid
, 42

gambling harms and women
, 150–151

relationship between harms and women sports bettors
, 158–159

results and analysis
, 152–155

rise, normalisation and alleged feminisation of sports betting globally and in
, 146–149

UK Gambling Commission
, 80

women sports bettors
, 155–158

United Kingdom’s Industry Group for Responsible Gambling (IRRG)
, 34

United States Department of Justice, The (DoJ)
, 139

Univariable analysis
, 96

University of Ghana
, 93–94

US consumer survey report (2019)
, 101

US Supreme Court
, 2

Virginia tobacco
, 11–12

Virtual betting
, 59

Welfare society model
, 59

Wet Kansspelen Op Afstand (KOA)
, 76

Whilst sampling bias
, 163–164

WHO
, 45, 179

WHO/Lancet/UNICEF commission
, 174

Women
, 150–151

Women sports bettors
, 155–158

relationship between harms and
, 158–159

Yahoo plus
, 111–112

Yahoo yahoo
, 112

Young adults
, 91

Young gamblers in Nigeria
, 119

Young Nigerians

concepts developed from study
, 122–123

ethical consideration
, 113–114

folk religion and gambling systematised in Nigeria
, 120–122

folk religion and sports betting in Nigeria
, 111–112

gamblers
, 122–123

method
, 113–115

realities of folk religion in gambling among
, 116–117

results
, 114–115

sampling
, 113

site selection
, 113

Young people
, 177

determinants of sports betting among young people and relationship with gender
, 149–150

marketing in normalisation of gambling for
, 175–178

normalisation of gambling for
, 174–178

support for action
, 178

Youth gamblers
, 112

Youth gambling
, 91–92

Youth sport
, 80

Zero taxes
, 132–134