On October 2, 1968, more than 300 students and workers at La Plaza de las Tres Culturas in Tlatelolco, Mexico City were gunned down by police, on the order of former President Luis Echeverria. Those that lost their lives were protesting against the staging of the Olympic Games in a country that was struggling with poverty and an endemic lack of funding in vital public services such as education and healthcare
In an attempt to undermine the IOC Games of 1936, organisations linked to the international worker s...
Graduate student conference held December 4-5, 2009 at the University of British Columbia. Panel 1: ...
This article discusses the political role of the Olympic Games and its implications on the hosting c...
On October 2, 1968, more than 300 students and workers at La Plaza de las Tres Culturas in Tlatelolc...
Whilst the Olympic Movement states that politics have no place in sport, political events have nonet...
National audienceOne of the most famous images of the 20th century is that of the men’s 200-meter po...
This thesis examines Mexico\u27s Olympic Project and its effects on the state-sponsored massacre of ...
In 1968 in Mexico City, John Carlos and Tommie Smith became the subjects of a photograph that would ...
As two Afro-American sprinters, Tommie Smith and John Carlos, were staged to receive the gold and br...
This dissertation argues that at the 1972 Munich Olympics politics intervened into the Games on an u...
The Olympics, being arguably the largest stage for athletics in the world, invites much crosswise co...
This case study considers how the Olympic stage has been utilised as a key arena for the expression ...
Name of diploma work: Political Background ofthe XX. Olympic Games inMunich 1972 Aim of work: Diplom...
On of the most indelible images of sport in the Sixties was the picture of Tommy Smith and John Carl...
Volume 125, Issue 30https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/10173/thumbnail.jp
In an attempt to undermine the IOC Games of 1936, organisations linked to the international worker s...
Graduate student conference held December 4-5, 2009 at the University of British Columbia. Panel 1: ...
This article discusses the political role of the Olympic Games and its implications on the hosting c...
On October 2, 1968, more than 300 students and workers at La Plaza de las Tres Culturas in Tlatelolc...
Whilst the Olympic Movement states that politics have no place in sport, political events have nonet...
National audienceOne of the most famous images of the 20th century is that of the men’s 200-meter po...
This thesis examines Mexico\u27s Olympic Project and its effects on the state-sponsored massacre of ...
In 1968 in Mexico City, John Carlos and Tommie Smith became the subjects of a photograph that would ...
As two Afro-American sprinters, Tommie Smith and John Carlos, were staged to receive the gold and br...
This dissertation argues that at the 1972 Munich Olympics politics intervened into the Games on an u...
The Olympics, being arguably the largest stage for athletics in the world, invites much crosswise co...
This case study considers how the Olympic stage has been utilised as a key arena for the expression ...
Name of diploma work: Political Background ofthe XX. Olympic Games inMunich 1972 Aim of work: Diplom...
On of the most indelible images of sport in the Sixties was the picture of Tommy Smith and John Carl...
Volume 125, Issue 30https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/10173/thumbnail.jp
In an attempt to undermine the IOC Games of 1936, organisations linked to the international worker s...
Graduate student conference held December 4-5, 2009 at the University of British Columbia. Panel 1: ...
This article discusses the political role of the Olympic Games and its implications on the hosting c...