MG Phillips’s research while affiliated with University of Tasmania and other places

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Publications (1)


Losing Control of the Ball: The Political Economy of Football and the Media in Australia
  • Article

August 2003

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52 Reads

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21 Citations

Journal of Sport and Social Issues

MG Phillips

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B Hutchins

This article examines the political economy of one of Australia's prominent football codes: Rugby League. A Marxist-influenced political economy approach is used to emphasize processes of domination, subordination, and resistance in the production and reproduction of power relations within capitalist sporting relations and structures. Analysis, framed around the concepts of MediaSport and the media sport cultural complex, shows how Rugby League is bound up in both national and global media processes. Key areas under examination include the historical development of the commodification of Rugby League, the growth of the media sport cultural complex, the role of pay television and the control of Rugby League vested in the transnational company News Corporation, and the supporter resistance to corporate media control in the sport.

Citations (1)


... The political-economic interpretation successfully identified the principle economic actors who make decisions and act in ways that bring them benefits, who make a profound impact on the nature and function of sport-related industries at the international level and whose actions are experienced in a variety of ways. Research on political economy usually asks questions about 'who owns and controls the means and relations of economic production and political power, and how this ownership and control has developed' (Phillips and Hutchins 2003). With globalization, many countries started to use sports as a key strategic social technology to boost the economy. ...

Reference:

Political economy and football in new market: the case of the Chinese Super League
Losing Control of the Ball: The Political Economy of Football and the Media in Australia
  • Citing Article
  • August 2003

Journal of Sport and Social Issues