Start Date

4-28-2025 12:35 PM

End Date

4-28-2025 1:50 PM

Disciplines

History

Subjects

Doping in sports -- Political aspects, Doping in sports -- Germany -- History, Steroids -- Social aspects, Sports -- Sociological aspects, World Anti-Doping Agency

Abstract

In 1989, the Berlin Wall fell, representing the end of both a deep physical and ideological divide between East and West Germany. The fall of the Berlin Wall revealed a state-sponsored doping program in East Germany created in order to compete for the political and economic symbol of strength: Olympic medals. Years later, the exposure of widespread West German doping in competitions shows the capacity of cheating to spread like a pathogen, passed from one nation to another in a pattern still visible today. Though East and West Germany were the epicenter of the doping outbreak, the trend spread globally and ultimately led to the establishment of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), which continues to struggle to limit this form of cheating today. This paper recounts the beginnings and ends of the East and West German doping programs, the beginnings of WADA, and offers insights into how the spread of cheating has had massive ramifications on the modern sporting world.

Part of the panel: Crime and Punishment
Moderator: Brenda Frink

Creative Commons License or Rights Statement

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Persistent Identifier

https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/43642

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Apr 28th, 12:35 PM Apr 28th, 1:50 PM

How the Cheating of East and West Germany Reveals a Global Trend of Doping in International Sports

In 1989, the Berlin Wall fell, representing the end of both a deep physical and ideological divide between East and West Germany. The fall of the Berlin Wall revealed a state-sponsored doping program in East Germany created in order to compete for the political and economic symbol of strength: Olympic medals. Years later, the exposure of widespread West German doping in competitions shows the capacity of cheating to spread like a pathogen, passed from one nation to another in a pattern still visible today. Though East and West Germany were the epicenter of the doping outbreak, the trend spread globally and ultimately led to the establishment of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), which continues to struggle to limit this form of cheating today. This paper recounts the beginnings and ends of the East and West German doping programs, the beginnings of WADA, and offers insights into how the spread of cheating has had massive ramifications on the modern sporting world.

Part of the panel: Crime and Punishment
Moderator: Brenda Frink