@article{oai:nara-edu.repo.nii.ac.jp:00013431, author = {高橋, 豪仁 and 童, 安佚 and 菊, 幸一}, issue = {1}, journal = {奈良教育大学紀要. 人文・社会科学, Bulletin of Nara University of Education. Cultural and Social Science}, month = {Dec}, note = {The purpose of this study is to clarify the features of Taiwanese sport organizations as nongovernmental ones, focusing on the Chinese Taipei Olympic Committee and the Republic of China Sport Federation from a viewpoint of “publicness,” and to make a suggestion about Japanese sport organizations. In this study three standpoints of “publicness” are used, which are the types of bottom-up or top-down, the “new public commons,” and “publicness” based on sport culture. Especially the first and second standpoints are used. The Chinese Taipei Olympic Committee dispatches the Taiwanese athletes to the international sport events hosted by the IOC, based on the Olympic model that is not restricted by the frame of the states, which means that the CTOC is regarded as the symbolic organization that generates a national identity as “Taiwan” or “Republic of China.” The Republic of China Sport Federation builds the “new public commons” and contributes to making a civil society, because the ROC Sport Federation develops the autonomous projects working with the government sector, the private sector and the community sector. In 2013, the Sport Affairs Council and the Department of Physical Education were integrated to the Sports Administration and it was located under the Ministry of Education, which might mean that Taiwanese sports policies were actually conducted in educational administration. Being under the concept of the “new public commons,” it may be needed that the CTOC and the ROC Sport Federation as nongovernmental sport organizations should not be obedient to the Sports Administration, but rather influence it by the civil hegemony.}, pages = {159--167}, title = {台湾のスポーツ組織に関する研究 ─中華台北オリンピック委員会と中華民國体育運動総会を対象として─}, volume = {69}, year = {2020} }