Associate Professor
Adam Beissel, Ph.D.
Biography
Adam S. Beissel, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor of Sport 兔子先生hip and Management (SLAM) at 兔子先生 University (OH). Prior to joining 兔子先生 in 2017, Adam previously held a position on the faculty of the Physical Cultural Studies program at the University of Maryland – College Park. He earned a BS in Sport Management from Towson University, an MBA from University of Baltimore/Towson University, and a PhD in Sport Studies from the University of Otago (New Zealand).
Education Credentials
- Ph.D. Sport Studies – University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand
- M.B.A. Sport Management – University of Baltimore/Towson University
- B.S. Sport Management – Towson University
Scholarly Focus
Adam’s scholarship and teaching interrogates the geopolitical economy of global sport. His primary research interests include six (6) themes:
(1) Political Economy of Sport Mega-Events;
(2) Geopolitics of Sport;
(3) Sport Stadiums and Urban Development;
(4) Social and Economic (in)justice in Collegiate Sport;
(5) Sports Labor Markets and Global Athletic Migration and;
(6) Sport, Globalization, and the Contemporary Global Economy.
His peer-reviewed manuscripts have appeared in several high-quality and highly selective academic journals, including: Sociology of Sport Journal; Soccer & Society; Journal of Sport and Social Issues; Sport in Society; Sport Management Review; Journal of Global Sport Management; International Journal of Sport Policy and Politics; International Journal of Sport Communication, International Journal of Sport Marketing and Sponsorship; and Journal of Intercollegiate Athletics. Moreover, he has published numerous book chapters on issues pertaining to the global politics of international sport in a number of edited books from such publishers as: Human Kinetics; Routledge; Palgrave MacMillan; Oxford University Press; Rutgers University Press; and Cornell University Press.
Adam’s research has been presented at such conferences as: North American Society for the Sociology of Sport; International Sociology of Sport World Congress; North American Society for Sport Management; College Sport Research Institute; the Football Collective; American Geographers; & Urban Affairs. In addition, he’s a frequent contributor to public scholarship with several news media interviews, authored op-eds, and featured podcast appearances.
Adam is currently working on an interdisciplinary research project critically examining the cultural and political economies of the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup held in Australia and New Zealand. In 2023, I published an edited monograph, The 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup: Politics, Representation, and Management in the Routledge Series on Women, Sport, and Physical Activity. The collection features chapters from leading international scholars and explores a range of issues as the world prepares for the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup. This includes such topics as examining the use of Indigenous language and iconography in bid and official documents, the use of social media in the successful bid of Australia-New Zealand, the role of sporting policies in the development of the tournament, and critical analyses of the impact of the tournament in Oceania. Together, the collection takes a critical (and, at times, hopeful) approach to the development of the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup tournament serving as a useful source and text for anyone interested in sport management, sport policy and politics, sport mega-events, international sports diplomacy, women and girls in sport, and gendered media representation(s) in sport. A book proposal for a second edited collection on the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup is under development with an expected publication date of late-2024.
Other ongoing research projects: critically examine the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup joint hosted in Mexico, Canada, and the United States; investigate the social, economic, and political machinations of sports programming at intercollegiate athletic institutions; explore the economic impact of mixed-use development logics guiding stadium construction; researches the transnational mobility and movement of global athletic laborers in the context of international sport, and considers the cultural impacts or effects of commercialization and globalization on the contemporary sport system.
Publications
Edited Books:
- Beissel, A.S., Postlethwaite, V., Grainger, A., & Brice, J. (Eds.) (2023). The FIFA 2023 Women’s World Cup: Politics, Representation, & Management. Routledge Book Series on Women, Sport, and Physical Activity. ISBN:
Recent Publications:
- Beissel, A.S., Postlethwaite, V., Grainger, A. & Brice, J. (2023). A New Hope? FIFA 2.0, Women’s Football Strategy, and event bidding for the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup. Soccer & Society. DOI: 1080/14660970.2023.2214512.
- Beissel, A.S. (2023). United as One: The conjunctural politics of the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup. In S. Chadwick, P. Widdop, & M. Goldman (Eds.), The geopolitical economy of sport – Pivotal moments in a new era. Chapter 23. Routledge. ISBN:
- Women’s World Cup and Australia’s sporting ambitions: A Decade of Green and Gold. In S. Beissel, V. Postlethwaite, Grainger, A., and J. Brice (Eds.), The 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup: Politics, representation, and management. Routledge. (pp. 189-205). ISBN: 9781032459035.
- Brice, J., Grainger, A., Beissel, A.S., Posthlethwaite, V. (2023). An analysis of Aotearoa New Zealand’s leverage strategies for the Women’s Cricket, Rugby, and Football World Cups. In S. Beissel, V. Postlethwaite, Grainger, A., and J. Brice (Eds.), The 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup: Politics, representation, and management. (pp. 175-188). Routledge. ISBN: 9781032459035.
- Crabill, E., Maddox, C., & Beissel, A.S. (2023). A content analysis of Australian and Aotearoa New Zealand online news media coverage of the bid process for the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup: We did it. In S. Beissel, V. Postlethwaite, Grainger, A., and J. Brice (Eds.), The 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup: Politics, representation, and management. (pp. 145-157). Routledge. ISBN: 9781032459035.
- Beissel, A.S., Postlethwaite, V., & Grainger, A., & Brice, J., (2023). Gender, branding, and the Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand As One 2023 social media strategy: Winning the Women’s World Cup. In S. Beissel, V. Postlethwaite, Grainger, A., and J. Brice (Eds.), The 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup: Politics, representation, and management. (pp. 124-145). Routledge. ISBN: 9781032459035.
- Beissel, A.S., Postlethwaite, V., Grainger, A., & Brice, J., (2023). As One 2023, conjunctural politics, and commercialisation of gender equality and women’s empowerment: The force awakens. In S. Beissel, V. Postlethwaite, Grainger, A., and J. Brice (Eds.), The 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup: Politics, representation, and management. (pp. 100-123). Routledge. ISBN: 9781032459035.
- Beissel, A.S., Postlethwaite, V., Grainger, A., & Brice, J., (2023). FIFA 2.0, FIFA Women’s Football Strategy, and the bid process for the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup: A new hope. In S. Beissel, V. Postlethwaite, Grainger, A., and J. Brice (Eds.), The 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup: Politics, representation, and management. Routledge. (pp. 85-99). Routledge. ISBN: 9781032459035.
- Postlethwaite, V., Beissel, A.S., Brice, J., & Grainger, A. (2023). Tracing FIFA’s “flagship women’s competition” and its use of legacy from 1991 to 2023. In S. Beissel, V. Postlethwaite, Grainger, A., and J. Brice (Eds.), The 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup: Politics, representation, and management. Routledge. (pp. 60-83). ISBN: 9781032459035.
- Friedman, M. & Beissel, A.S. (2023). Supercharging the mallpark. In M. Friedman, Mallparks: The social production of contemporary cathedrals of consumption. (Chapter 9). Cornell Publishing.
- Beissel, A.S. & Andrews, D.L. (2023). Disaster football: billionaire owners, shock therapy, and the exploitation of the COVID-19 pandemic in European football. In Andrews, D.L, Newman, J.I., & Thorpe, H., Sport and physical culture in global pandemic times: COVID. assemblages. (pp. 740-771). Palgrave McMillan. ISBN:
- Crabill, E., Maddox, C., & Beissel, A.S. (2022). We did it: Women’s World Cup 2023 analysis of online news media. International Journal of Sport Communication. 16(1). DOI: 11123/ijsc.2022-0133
- Beissel, A.S., & Ternes, N. (2022). The Empire Strikes Back: FIFA 2.0, global peacemaking, and the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup United Bid. Journal of Global Sport Management. DOI: 1080/24704067.2022.2116589.
- Brice, J., Grainger, A., Beissel, A.S., Postlethwaite, V. (2022). The World Cup Trilogy: An analysis of Aotearoa New Zealand’s hosting of three women’s sport mega-events to leverage gender initiatives and programmes. International Journal of Sport Policy and Politics. DOI: 1080/19406940.2022.2117839.
- Beissel, A.S., & Andrews, D.L. (2022). Sport, globalization, and glocalization. In Wenner, L. (Ed.), (Chapter 10). The Oxford Handbook of Sport & Society. Oxford University Press.
- Beissel, A.S., & McLeod, C. (2022). The Corporeal Sport Economy. In J. I. Newman, D. L. Andrews, & R. Pitter (Eds.), The Active Body: A Socio-Cultural Introduction. (pp. 72-89). Human Kinetics. ISBN: 1450468659.
- King-White, R., & Beissel, A.S., Clevenger, S. (2021). Trust me, don’t trust me: Administrative governance and the shift to big-time athletics at Towson University. Journal of Intercollegiate Athletics. 14, 626-651.
- Beissel, A.S., Postlethwaite, V., & Grainger, A. (2021). “Winning the Women’s World Cup”: Gender, branding, and the Australia-New Zealand AS ONE 2023 social media strategy for the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup. Sport In Society: Special Issue on Sport Mega-Events of the 2020s – Governance, Impacts, and Controversies. DOI: doi.org/10.1080/17430437.2021.1980780
- Beissel, A.S., Grainger, A.G., & Morris, S.P. (2021). Going global: Developing, designing, and delivering a high-impact short-term, faculty-led study abroad for sport management students. In Rayner, M. & T. Webb (Eds.). Global Perspectives on Sport Management Education: Implications for Practice. (pp. 86-109). Routledge. ISBN: 9780367690267.
- Ruihley, B. & Beissel, A.S. (2021). EconFantasy simulation and practice: Implications of research-led teaching. In Rayner, M. & T. Webb (Eds.). Global Perspectives on Sport Management Education: Implications for Practice. (pp. 58-72). Routledge. ISBN: 9780367690267.
- Beissel, A.S., & Kohe, G. (2020). United as one: the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup hosting vision and the symbolic politics of legacy. Managing Sport Leisure. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. DOI: 10.1080/23750472.2020.1846138.
- Friedman, M.F. & Beissel, A.S. (2020). Beyond “who pays?”: Stadium development and urban governance. International Journal of Sports Marketing and Sponsorship: Special Issue on Sport and Urban Governance. Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. DOI: 10.1108/IJSMS-04-2020-0053.
- Beissel, A.S., & Andrews, D.L. (2020). Art of the deal: Donald Trump, soft power, and winning the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup bid. In Clift, B. & Tomlinson, A. (Eds.), Populism and the Sport and Leisure Spectacle. (pp. 234-253). Routledge. ISBN: 9780367356385.
- Beissel, A.S. (2019). Transnational corporations of football kin: Migration, labor flows, and the American Samoa MIRAB economy. Journal of Sport and Social Issues, 44(1), 47-69. DOI:1177/0193723519867684.
- King-White, R.W. & Beissel, A.S. (2018). Sport in the aspirational corporate university: A genealogy of athletic programming development at Towson University. Sociology of Sport Journal. 35(4), 334-346. DOI:1123/ssj.2018-0100.
- Beissel, A.S. (2018). Confessions of a human trafficker: Inside the global recruitment system(s) and network(s) of international student-athletes in NCAA football. In King-White, R.W. (Ed.), Sport in the Neoliberal University: Profit, Politics, and Pedagogy. (pp. 170-192). Rutgers University Press. ISBN: 9780813587738.
Publications in Progress:
- Friedman, M., Hindin, J., & Beissel, A.S. (in preparation). Producing a theme park city: A Lefebvrean analysis of The Battery Atlanta (In preparation, 2022). Sociology of Sport Journal. Contribution: 20%.
- Beissel, A.S. & Ruihley, B. (in preparation). Sport, gambling, and promotional culture: The rise of integrative media, user generated content, and the sports-media-gambling industrial complex.
- Chen, R., Su, Y., & Beissel, A.S. (in preparation). The quest for authenticity amidst athlete activism and sportswashing: A case study of distant fan communities during the 2022 FIFA Men’s World Cup. Soccer & Society Special Issue.
- Postlethwaite, V., Beissel, A.S., Brice, J., & Grainger, A. (in review). FIFA Women’s World Cup and legacy: From absence to centrality. International Journal of Sport History.