Sports in International Politics
Students create a series of YouTube videos that explain the link between major sports events in history and International Relations.
The aim of the project
To use IR theory to examine the impact of sporting events on world affairs - and to present the findings in an accessible format.
Project members
Educational Innovation and Leadership (1)
Human-Computer Interaction (1)
Law (1)
Sociology (1)
Government and Administration (1)
Physical Education (1)
Human Rights in the Digital Society (1)
Law (1)
Advertising and Public Relations (1)
Contemporary Media (1)
Politics and Governance (1)
Government and Administration (1)
Physical Education (1)
Law (2)
Psychology (1)
Human Rights in the Digital Society (1)
Advertising and Public Relations (1)
Psychology (1)
Asian studies (1)
Human-Computer Interaction (1)
Crossmedia (1)
Politics and Governance (1)
Project materials
Portfolio - Sports in International Politics (1)_0.docx (1.08 MB)
Portfolio
Presentation.pptx (8.14 MB)
Presentation
Research-Group3.docx (22.15 KB)
Research Paper- Group 4.docx.pdf (113.09 KB)
- Youtube channel
Links
Participants
T
Tamari Sekhniashvili
E
Esmaeil Varasteh
M
Melita Sogomonjan
A
Ats Vannus
K
Kristjan Kallaste
H
Hanna-Stiina Tornius
O
Oskar Joonas Rundu
D
Daniil Repkin
H
Himel Mahmud
F
Feliks Jürisson
N
Nikita Jegorov
M
Mirjam Muhk
A
Alo Alo Kedju Nkemtaji
M
Mark Andre Udikas
A
Andres Oitsar
H
Harun Balic
A
Alari Hommik
U
Uchechi Eluwa
V
Vitalii Vasyliev
D
Dmitri Šašolin
S
Sten Sokk
K
Kristjan Baikov
Y
Yee Ting Aires Chung
S
Shan Shafiq
A
Aleksander Belov
L
Lukas Gajonia
Extra information about referencing and rights
When referencing project outcomes, the APA7 citation system is used.
If a work has more than 20 authors, the names of the first 19 authors are listed, followed by an ellipsis (...), and then the name of the final author. If there are fewer than 20 authors, the names of all authors are listed.