Article

The Iron Curtain and Referee Bias in International Football

Details

Citation

Dagaev D, Paklina S, Reade JJ & Singleton C (2024) The Iron Curtain and Referee Bias in International Football. Journal of Sports Economics, 25 (1), pp. 126-151. https://doi.org/10.1177/15270025231206470

Abstract
Using the assignment of referees to European international association football matches played between 2002 and 2016, we ask whether judgments were biased according to the legacy of the Cold War. We find that referees from post-communist states favored teams from non-communist states, but there was no evidence of favoritism in the other direction. This out-group bias of referees born behind the Iron Curtain was statistically significant for relatively less important and more subjective decisions, namely the awarding of yellow cards for foul play. The bias was particularly large among referees from the former Soviet Union. It has also diminished over time, perhaps due to increased professionalism in European refereeing, or because memories of the Cold War era have diminished among active referees.

Keywords
home advantage; social pressure; international relations; sports economics

Journal
Journal of Sports Economics: Volume 25, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date31/01/2024
Publication date online31/10/2023
Date accepted by journal21/09/2023
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/35664
ISSN1527-0025
eISSN1552-7794

People (1)

People

Dr Carl Singleton

Dr Carl Singleton

Senior Lecturer in Economics, Economics