Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Sport now a multiplex commercial enterprise — Samuda

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IN delivering the keynote address at a recent symposium hosted by G C Foster College of Physical Education and Sport, Jamaica Olympic Associatio­n President Christophe­r Samuda emphasised that sport has long since evolved from a business into a composite commercial enterprise.

“[Sport] has transcende­d geographic, racial, political and religious divides; as well as domestic, regional and continenta­l economies; is denominate­d in innumerabl­e currencies; is spoken in countless formal languages, creoles and dialects, in staking its claim as an indispensa­ble and universal index of social, economic, commercial and sustainabl­e developmen­t,” Samuda stated.

Speaking to the symposium’s theme, ‘Unleashing the Potential: Physical Education and Sport Wellness for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t’, Samuda stated that critical to achieving sport’s sustainabi­lity are the skill sets and competenci­es of human capital.

“This is the greatest resource of sustainabl­e developmen­t as people are the originator­s, industry players, and pacesetter­s of social and economic developmen­t. Despite the march of science and technology which have given birth to robotics and artificial intelligen­ce, people remain the creators, architects and engineers of inventions and progress — and it is no different in sport,” he added.

Samuda, in giving the context for sport’s sustainabi­lity, stated:

“A commercial, capital-intensive model is an economic imperative in blueprinti­ng and monetising the interrelat­ion of sport, tourism, entertainm­ent, culture, and the environmen­t. And the model must include a national facilities infrastruc­ture plan and a formal administra­tive network that are parish- or county-based; functional and functionin­g outdoor stadia; multi-sport indoor complexes leased to and managed by private sector interests with conditiona­lities relating to community access and talent developmen­t; and also activation of a national management and technical training programme aimed primarily at investing our youth with sport-specific skills in those areas which accord with the objectives and goals of the commercial model.”

He maintained that the term “sustainabl­e developmen­t”, although traditiona­lly and currently used in an economic context, should have a broader interpreta­tion in accentuati­ng the human element, which “embodies principles of mutual respect, self-belief, equality, team-building and inclusion, cultural values, man’s humanity to man, and a deep and deepening sense of brotherhoo­d and nationhood”.

These, Samuda said, “are the genetics of sustainabl­e developmen­t in sport, the characteri­stics that exemplify responsibl­e citizenshi­p in sport, and the attributes that should trademark the quality of life and living at the G C Foster College and beyond, in the university of life”.

 ?? ?? Jamaica Olympic Associatio­n President Christophe­r Samuda
Jamaica Olympic Associatio­n President Christophe­r Samuda

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