WADA publishes Athletes’ Anti-Doping Rights Act

Developed by athletes, the document ensures that their rights are clear, accessible and universally applicable  25 Jun 2020
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By WADA

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has released, in English and French, the final designed version of the Athletes’ Anti-Doping Rights Act (Act). The document was developed by WADA’s Athlete Committee over two and half years in consultation with thousands of athletes and stakeholders worldwide.

The Athletes’ Anti-Doping Rights Act is available on WADA’s website. 

The purpose of the Act is to ensure that the rights of all athletes worldwide to participate in doping-free sport are clearly set out, accessible, and universally applicable. The Act is based on the 2021 World Anti-Doping Code (Code) and its related International Standards that take effect on 1 January 2021. It was approved by WADA’s Executive Committee on 7 November 2019 during the World Conference on Doping in Sport. 

Developed by athletes, for athletes, the Act provides an outline of rights provided by the 2021 Code and International Standards in terms of equality of opportunity, fair testing programmes, medical treatment, justice, accountability, education, data protection and more. 

It also makes recommendations around athletes’ rights to be part of a system that is free from corruption, that they are appropriately represented in terms of governance and decision-making, and that they have a right to legal aid.

WADA Athlete Committee Chair Ben Sandford said: “It is vital that athletes and anti-doping organisations know what rights athletes have, how to access them, and where to go for remedy. We hope that the Act will become a valuable resource for athletes and contribute to making sport cleaner and fairer. We call upon the anti-doping community worldwide to support its implementation and its promise.”

WADA President Witold Bańka and 400m runner, said: “WADA is an athlete-centered organisation and everything that we do is to protect athletes’ right to access Clean Sport. I applaud the Athlete Committee’s efforts in developing the Anti-Doping Rights Act, which helps ensure that athletes are aware of their rights and can exercise them, which is vital to the success of Clean Sport.”