International University Sports Federation
- 1949–2011: Brussels, Belgium
- since 2011: Lausanne, Switzerland
Penninah Aligawesa Kabenge (UGA)
Marian Dymalski (POL)
Liu Jin (CHN)
The International University Sports Federation (FISU; French: Fédération internationale du sport universitaire) is responsible for the organization and governance of worldwide sports competitions for student-athletes between the ages of 17 and 25. It was founded in 1949[1] as the world governing body of national university sports organizations and currently has 165[2] member associations (National University Sport Federations) from five continents. Between 1949 and 2011, it was based in Brussels (Belgium); it was relocated to Lausanne (Switzerland) since 2011.
The FISU stages its events every two years. They currently include three World University Games (beach,summer and winter) and 34[3] World University Championships. It also organizes conferences, forums and seminars to promote sport as a component of the educational system.[4] FISU sanctions other competitions open to university students, such as the biennial World University Bridge Championships in contract bridge, "played under the auspices of the FISU".[5]
Organization
A General Assembly elects an executive committee for a four-year term. Oleg Matytsin was elected president for 2015–2019, succeeding Claude-Louis Gallien.[6] The secretary-general and CEO is Eric Saintrond;[7] regional vice-presidents are Leonz Eder , Luciano Cabral, Marian Dymalski, Leopold Senghor and Liguo Yang.[8]
Past presidents include:
- 1949–1961: Paul Schleimer (LUX)
- 1961–1999: Primo Nebiolo (ITA)
- 1999–2011: George E. Killian (USA)
- 2011–2015: Claude–Louis Gallien (FRA)
- 2015-2022: Oleg Matytsin (RUS)
- 2022-2027: Leonz Eder (SUI)
Events and sports
Summer
The FISU World University Games,[9] formerly and commonly referred to as the Universiade, is an international sporting event staged every two years in a different city. There were 10,622 participants in Shenzhen, China, in 2011, and 174 participating countries in Daegu, Korea, in 2003.[citation needed]
The Summer Universiade includes 12 compulsory sports (15 compulsory disciplines):[10]
- Athletics
- Swimming
- Diving
- Water polo
- Archery
- Badminton
- Basketball
- Fencing
- Artistic gymnastics
- Rhythmic gymnastics
- Judo
- Table tennis
- Taekwondo
- Tennis
- Volleyball
Winter
The Winter Games includes eight compulsory sports and one to four optional sports are chosen by the host country or city.If speed skating is at the list of the optional sports,a fourth could be choose.[10][11]
- Alpine skiing
- Biathlon
- Cross-country skiing
- Curling
- Figure skating
- Ice hockey
- Short track speed skating
- Snowboarding
World University Championships
While the Universiades are held in odd years, the FISU World University Championships are held in even years. It includes individual/team sports, indoor/outdoor sports, combat sports, mind sports and summer/winter sports.[12]
International Day of University Sport
The International Day of University Sport is celebrated every year on 20 September by the FISU and UNESCO.
Banning
In light of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, FISU suspended Russian and Belarusian athletes and national university sports federation officials from participating in FISU competitions and activities until at least the end of 2022, cancelled two FISU University World Cups in Russia and a FISU World University Championships in Belarus scheduled for 2022 (the FISU University World Cup Powerlifting from Moscow, the FISU University World Cup Rugby Sevens from Kazan, and the FISU World University Championship Waterski & Wakeboard from Belarus), and cancelled Russia's hosting of the FISU University World Cup Combat Sports and associated meetings scheduled for 2022.[13][14] The FISU also suspended the hosting rights and cancelled the 2023 Summer World University Games, to be held in Yekaterinburg.[15]
See also
- FISU World University Games
- Maison du Sport International
- International Olympic Committee
- International Academy of Sport Science and Technology
- Lausanne campus
- International School Sport Federation
References
- ^ FISU Statutes Archived 2011-05-30 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2016-01-19.
- ^ "Current structure". www.fisu.net. Archived from the original on 2018-08-09. Retrieved 2018-03-07.
- ^ "World University Championships". www.fisu.net. Retrieved 2018-03-07.
- ^ Ferreira, P. (2010) Strategy Assessment of International Sports Federations – Case study of the International University Sports Federation (FISU). Executive Masters in Sports Organisation Management, University of Poitiers, France.
- ^ World University Team Cup Archived 2011-10-27 at the Wayback Machine. World Bridge Federation. 5th World University Bridge Championship Archived 2011-08-13 at the Wayback Machine Event website (2010). Chinese Taipei University Sports Federation. Retrieved 2011-08-12.
- ^ 34th General Assembly in Lausanne elects New Board. Retrieved 2016-01-19.
- ^ "Russia awards FISU Secretary General-CEO Eric Saintrond with the Order of Friendship". www.fisu.net. Retrieved 2022-01-20.
- ^ "FISU Secretary-General meets AUSF, FUSC and City Authorities in Beijing". www.fisu.net. Retrieved 2022-01-20.
- ^ Pavitt, Michael (28 July 2020). "FISU finalises naming system for events". insidethegames.biz. Retrieved 19 April 2021.
- ^ a b "Winter FISU World University Games". www.fisu.net. Retrieved 2022-01-20.
- ^ Winter Universiade. Retrieved 2016-01-19.
- ^ "World University Championships". www.fisu.net. Archived from the original on 2017-08-04. Retrieved 2017-07-24.
- ^ "FISU Steering Committee - Key Decisions Regarding Ukraine, Russia and Belarus". USA Team.
- ^ "FISU condemns conflict in Ukraine, withdraws competitions from Russia and Belarus". www.fisu.net.
- ^ "FISU suspends Yekaterinburg hosting rights for 2023 World University Games".
- v
- t
- e
- Turin 1959
- Sofia 1961
- Porto Alegre 1963
- Budapest 1965
- Tokyo 1967
- Turin 1970
- Moscow 1973
- Rome 1975
- Sofia 1977
- Mexico City 1979
- Bucharest 1981
- Edmonton 1983
- Kobe 1985
- Zagreb 1987
- Duisburg 1989
- Sheffield 1991
- Buffalo 1993
- Fukuoka 1995
- Sicily 1997
- Palma de Mallorca 1999
- Beijing 2001
- Daegu 2003
- İzmir 2005
- Bangkok 2007
- Belgrade 2009
- Shenzhen 2011
- Kazan 2013
- Gwangju 2015
- Taipei 2017
- Naples 2019
- Chengdu 2021†
- Yekaterinburg 2023‡
- Rhine-Ruhr 2025
- Chungcheong 2027
- North Carolina 2029
- Chamonix 1960
- Villars 1962
- Špindlerův Mlýn 1964
- Sestriere 1966
- Innsbruck 1968
- Rovaniemi 1970
- Lake Placid 1972
- Livigno 1975
- Špindlerův Mlýn 1978
- Jaca 1981
- Sofia 1983
- Belluno 1985
- Štrbské Pleso 1987
- Sofia 1989
- Sapporo 1991
- Zakopane 1993
- Jaca 1995
- Muju-Chonju 1997
- Poprad-Tatry 1999
- Zakopane 2001
- Tarvisio 2003
- Innsbruck-Seefeld 2005
- Turin 2007
- Harbin 2009
- Erzurum 2011
- Trentino 2013
- Granada-Štrbské Pleso 2015
- Almaty 2017
- Krasnoyarsk 2019
- Lucerne 2021§
- Lake Placid 2023
- Turin 2025
- TBD 2027
- †Postponed to 2023 due to the COVID-19 pandemic
- ‡Cancelled due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine
- §Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
- FISU
- Sports at the FISU World University Games
- All-time FISU World University Games medal table
- FISU World University Games medals by host nation