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  1. Dec 6, 2018 · Match-fixing is a real threat to the integrity of sport. It is a crime that robs spectators of the pleasure of watching a contest that they can trust.

  2. Mar 15, 2018 · Overall, this study highlights that match-fixing is not solely instigated by organised crime groups, but can also be incubated within a sport whose culture, management and ethics are...

  3. Aug 17, 2016 · Whilst it remains to be seen whether more match fixing cases will be detected in coming years it’s clear that match fixing can have devastating criminal and professional consequences on the participants as well as bring the sport into disrepute.

  4. Mar 17, 2021 · In the UNCAC framework, “match-fixing” can appear in a form of six corruption criminal offences: active and passive bribery in the public sector (Art. 15–16 of the UNCAC); active and passive trading in influence (Art. 18 of the UNCAC); and active and passive bribery in the private sector (Art. 21 of the UNCAC).

    • M. Diaconu, S. Kuwelkar, A. Kuhn
    • 2021
  5. Sep 3, 2021 · This article aims to show how match-fixing is a threat to sport, not only from an ethical but also from a legal perspective, and to explain the various challenges of combating match-fixing in...

  6. May 5, 2015 · How does match-fixing, or other unfair manipulation of matches, that involves under-performance by players, or refereeing and umpiring that prevents fair competition, be thought of in ethical terms? In this article, I outline the different forms that match-fixing can take and seek to comprehend these disparate scenarios within Kantian, Hegelian ...

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  8. This blog will critique the Plan as it relates to sport in light of both the recently proposed legislative and regulatory amendments to the current anti-corruption framework and the criminal match-fixing cases investigated in England and Wales in the past couple of years.

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