Just found this today, might be interesting to someone:

Play the Game 2013 Conference
28-31 October 2013 in Aarhus, Denmark
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The world communication conference Play the Game 2013 will be the eighth time Play the Game opens its doors for stakeholders in sport to discuss essential issues in world sport. Download the conference programme here

http://www.playthegame.org/conferenc...streaming.html

The main themes of the conference are:
Match-fixing: Fair game for gangsters?
Sports reforms: Fact or phantom?
The anti-doping dilemma: Saving sport, sacrificing athletes?
Recreational sport: A lost cause for sports organisations?
Sports facilities: Who are we building for?
From Russia to Rio: Power games or people’s games?
Open Forum


"Play the Game 2013 will also feature the launch of Declan Hill’s new book ‘The Insider’s Guide to Football Corruption – an academic view of match fixing’.

Declan Hill is a PhD and an investigative journalist who already in 2005 opened the international debate on match-fixing at the Play the Game conference in Copenhagen. His best-seller ’The Fix’ from 2008 exposed the world of the fixers through first-hand experiences.


According to Declan Hill match-fixing differs significantly from other forms of corruption in sport.


“Every other form of corruption either affects the officials or is cheating to win – where athletes break the rules to gain competitive advantage,” says Hill.


“Fixing destroys sport. It turns it into theatre. Asian sports have been devastated by fixing. In our globalised world the same thing will happen to European and North American sports unless we stop the fixing now.”


Speaking at the conference, Declan Hill hopes to heighten the delegates’ sense of realism in relation to the match-fixing discourse. And like in 2005, he intends to provide information that will cause uneasy feelings in the sports community.


“I will bring an edge of realism to the debate about fixing. Since I revealed the existence of fixing networks based in Asia that were corrupting international sports, a mini-industry of consultants and dubious ‘experts’ has arisen,” says Hill, who will elaborate on his viewpoints in his presentation at Play the Game 2013 called: The Red Flags of Bullshit in the Anti-Match-Fixing Industry."