Has the World Cup become more migratory? A comparative history of foreign-born players in national football teams, c. 1930-2018

Abstract While the presence of foreign-born footballers in national teams has a long history, it is often believed that the World Cup has become more migratory over time. The presumed increases in the volume and diversity of foreign-born footballers have, however, remained empirically untested. In t...

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Main Authors: Gijs van Campenhout, Jacco van Sterkenburg, Gijsbert Oonk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-05-01
Series:Comparative Migration Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-019-0118-6
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spelling doaj-89ba71c02f894adfb6748a45966e88bf2020-11-25T02:14:59ZengSpringerOpenComparative Migration Studies2214-594X2019-05-017111910.1186/s40878-019-0118-6Has the World Cup become more migratory? A comparative history of foreign-born players in national football teams, c. 1930-2018Gijs van Campenhout0Jacco van Sterkenburg1Gijsbert Oonk2Department of History, Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication, Erasmus University RotterdamDepartment of Media & Communication, Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication, Erasmus University RotterdamDepartment of History, Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication, Erasmus University RotterdamAbstract While the presence of foreign-born footballers in national teams has a long history, it is often believed that the World Cup has become more migratory over time. The presumed increases in the volume and diversity of foreign-born footballers have, however, remained empirically untested. In this article, we empirically test whether the presence of foreign-born footballers at the World Cup has changed over time in respect to these two dimensions of migration. We conducted an analysis on 4.761 footballers, derived from the fifteen national teams that competed in at least ten editions of the World Cup between 1930 and 2018, which comprises of 301 foreign-born football players. We argue that countries’ different histories of migration, in combination with historically used citizenship regimes, largely influence the migratory dimensions of their representative football teams. Our outcomes show that the (absolute) volume of foreign-born footballers in World Cups is indeed increasing over time. Moreover, foreign-born footballers seem to come from an increasingly diverse range of countries. We, therefore, conclude that the World Cup has become more migratory in terms of volume and diversity from an immigration perspective.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-019-0118-6MigrationCitizenshipNationalityForeign-bornDiversityHistory
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gijs van Campenhout
Jacco van Sterkenburg
Gijsbert Oonk
spellingShingle Gijs van Campenhout
Jacco van Sterkenburg
Gijsbert Oonk
Has the World Cup become more migratory? A comparative history of foreign-born players in national football teams, c. 1930-2018
Comparative Migration Studies
Migration
Citizenship
Nationality
Foreign-born
Diversity
History
author_facet Gijs van Campenhout
Jacco van Sterkenburg
Gijsbert Oonk
author_sort Gijs van Campenhout
title Has the World Cup become more migratory? A comparative history of foreign-born players in national football teams, c. 1930-2018
title_short Has the World Cup become more migratory? A comparative history of foreign-born players in national football teams, c. 1930-2018
title_full Has the World Cup become more migratory? A comparative history of foreign-born players in national football teams, c. 1930-2018
title_fullStr Has the World Cup become more migratory? A comparative history of foreign-born players in national football teams, c. 1930-2018
title_full_unstemmed Has the World Cup become more migratory? A comparative history of foreign-born players in national football teams, c. 1930-2018
title_sort has the world cup become more migratory? a comparative history of foreign-born players in national football teams, c. 1930-2018
publisher SpringerOpen
series Comparative Migration Studies
issn 2214-594X
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Abstract While the presence of foreign-born footballers in national teams has a long history, it is often believed that the World Cup has become more migratory over time. The presumed increases in the volume and diversity of foreign-born footballers have, however, remained empirically untested. In this article, we empirically test whether the presence of foreign-born footballers at the World Cup has changed over time in respect to these two dimensions of migration. We conducted an analysis on 4.761 footballers, derived from the fifteen national teams that competed in at least ten editions of the World Cup between 1930 and 2018, which comprises of 301 foreign-born football players. We argue that countries’ different histories of migration, in combination with historically used citizenship regimes, largely influence the migratory dimensions of their representative football teams. Our outcomes show that the (absolute) volume of foreign-born footballers in World Cups is indeed increasing over time. Moreover, foreign-born footballers seem to come from an increasingly diverse range of countries. We, therefore, conclude that the World Cup has become more migratory in terms of volume and diversity from an immigration perspective.
topic Migration
Citizenship
Nationality
Foreign-born
Diversity
History
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-019-0118-6
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