<codeBook xmlns="ddi:codebook:2_5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="ddi:codebook:2_5 https://ddialliance.org/Specification/DDI-Codebook/2.5/XMLSchema/codebook.xsd" version="2.5"><docDscr><citation><titlStmt><titl>India’s Long Game – Empowering Olympians and the Path to a 2036 Summer Olympics</titl><IDNo agency="DOI">doi:10.7910/DVN/NQFBA8</IDNo></titlStmt><distStmt><distrbtr source="archive">Harvard Dataverse</distrbtr><distDate>2024-08-09</distDate></distStmt><verStmt source="archive"><version date="2024-08-09" type="RELEASED">1</version></verStmt><biblCit>De, Souhardya, 2024, "India’s Long Game – Empowering Olympians and the Path to a 2036 Summer Olympics", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/NQFBA8, Harvard Dataverse, V1</biblCit></citation></docDscr><stdyDscr><citation><titlStmt><titl>India’s Long Game – Empowering Olympians and the Path to a 2036 Summer Olympics</titl><IDNo agency="DOI">doi:10.7910/DVN/NQFBA8</IDNo></titlStmt><rspStmt><AuthEnty affiliation="University of Bristol">De, Souhardya</AuthEnty></rspStmt><prodStmt/><distStmt><distrbtr source="archive">Harvard Dataverse</distrbtr><contact affiliation="University of Bristol" email="fr23780@bristol.ac.uk">De, Souhardya</contact><depositr>De, Souhardya</depositr><depDate>2024-08-09</depDate></distStmt><holdings URI="https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/NQFBA8"/></citation><stdyInfo><subject><keyword xml:lang="en">Social Sciences</keyword><keyword xml:lang="en">Other</keyword><keyword>Olympics</keyword><keyword>India</keyword></subject><abstract date="2024-08-05">As the Paris Olympics comes to an end, I write on India's sporting infrastructure and aspirations to host the 2036 edition of the Summer Olympics. Whilst a 2036 Olympics in India - the bid for which was announced by Prime Minister Modi &amp; seconded in Paris itself by IOC member Nita Ambani, might not be a far-fetched dream, I demonstrate the range of complexities and things to consider in the lead-up to the Games. I take into account India's performance at the Games, its underrepresentation in relation to other national contingents, and the often-politicised question of return on investment to advocate for a threefold policy approach aimed at enhancing our domestic sporting facilities and targeted to boost our capabilities to host an event of such magnitude. In conclusion, I suggest that the Parisian model, which emphasises maximum utilisation of the existing infrastructure and minimal exclusive public investment in the Games might present a desirable prototype that India looks to put to test in 2036.</abstract><sumDscr/></stdyInfo><method><dataColl><sources/></dataColl><anlyInfo/></method><dataAccs><setAvail/><useStmt/><notes type="DVN:TOU" level="dv">&lt;a href="http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0">CC0 1.0&lt;/a></notes></dataAccs><othrStdyMat><relPubl><citation><titlStmt><titl>De, Souhardya. “India’s Long Game – Empowering Olympians and the Path to a 2036 Summer Olympics.” The Coverage, 5 Aug. 2024, www.the-coverage.co.uk/india-olympics.</titl></titlStmt><biblCit>De, Souhardya. “India’s Long Game – Empowering Olympians and the Path to a 2036 Summer Olympics.” The Coverage, 5 Aug. 2024, www.the-coverage.co.uk/india-olympics.</biblCit></citation><ExtLink URI="https://www.the-coverage.co.uk/india-olympics"/></relPubl></othrStdyMat></stdyDscr><otherMat ID="f10430996" URI="https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/10430996" level="datafile"><labl>India Olympics.pdf</labl><notes level="file" type="DATAVERSE:CONTENTTYPE" subject="Content/MIME Type">application/pdf</notes></otherMat></codeBook>