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The FootPol Podcast

The FootPol Podcast

By: Francesco Belcastro and Guy Burton
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The podcast that brings together football and politics. We'll be exploring the relationship between the two, both inside and outside the game.

The podcast covers "Big Politics" like politicians, clubs, international and national federations and other organised groups and how they use or abuse the game to "Small, Everyday Politics" in the form of community-level clubs, fan associations and the way that football reflects the political challenges of our day to day lives.

The FootPol Podcast is brought to you by co-hosts Drs Francesco Belcastro and Guy Burton.

© 2026 The FootPol Podcast
Football (Soccer) Political Science Politics & Government
Episodes
  • How France’s Football Became a Political Battleground ft. Jonathan Ervine
    May 25 2026

    With the 2026 World Cup just weeks away, France once again enters the tournament as one of football’s superpowers — but what does the French national team actually represent in modern France? In this gripping episode, co-hosts Guy Burton and Francesco Belcastro sit down with Bangor University's Senior Lecturer in French (Studies), Jonathan Ervine, to unpack the explosive intersection of football, politics, identity, race, religion and nationalism in French society. From the myth of the 1998 “Black-Blanc-Beur” champions to the rise of the far right, the tensions of secularism, and the political symbolism of stars like Kylian Mbappé and Zinedine Zidane, this episode reveals why French football is about far more than what happens on the pitch.

    The discussion explores immigration, the banlieues, anti-racism campaigns, homophobia in Ligue 1, the hijab controversy in women’s football, Ramadan debates and the growing pressure on players to speak out politically. The hosts also look ahead to France’s World Cup chances, Didier Deschamps’ expected departure and why Zidane’s likely appointment could become one of the most politically charged moments in recent French sporting history. Essential listening for anyone following the 2026 World Cup, European politics or the deeper forces shaping global football today.

    Jonthan's various publications associated with French football include "Negotiating Breton Celtic identity on and off the pitch: contemporary football in Brittany" (with Paddy Hoey), "Football and antisemitism in France: visibility and invisibility," "France - Les Bleus and the Republic: Diversity, Difference and Discrimination" and "Nicolas Anelka and the Quenelle Gesture: A Study of the Complexities of Protest in Contemporary Football."

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    56 mins
  • 2026 World Cup Debutants: How Curaçao Built a World Cup Team in the Netherlands ft. Karym Leito & Margo Groenewoud
    May 11 2026

    As Curaçao prepares for its first-ever FIFA World Cup appearance, the latest episode of the FootPol podcast goes far beyond football. Host Guy Burton is joined by historians and researchers Karym Leito and Margo Groenewoud to unpack how a small Caribbean island with deep colonial ties to the Netherlands built a national team capable of reaching football’s biggest stage. The conversation explores Curaçao’s layered political status, stark social inequalities behind the tourist façade, and the decisive role of the diaspora in transforming the national side through players developed in Dutch academies. From missionary-founded clubs and fiercely local football identities to debates over women’s football, infrastructure and who truly benefits from World Cup success, the episode reveals how sport has become entangled with questions of migration, belonging and national identity. Against the backdrop of the island’s euphoric “Blue Wave” celebrations ahead of clashes with Germany, Ecuador and Ivory Coast, the discussion asks a larger question: what does World Cup qualification actually mean for Curaçao beyond the spectacle itself? This episode also concludes FootPol’s World Cup debutants mini-series, following previous episodes on Jordan, Uzbekistan and Cape Verde.

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    46 mins
  • Can Football Explain Globalisation? Revisiting the Theory ft. Graham Cornwell
    Apr 27 2026

    What does football really reveal about globalisation—and where does that neat theory start to fall apart? In this episode, hosts Guy Burton and Francesco Belcastro are joined by historian and analyst Graham Cornwell (George Washington University; Box2Box) for a sharp, wide-ranging discussion that uses the global game as a lens on power, identity and money. Drawing on Cornwell’s recent Foreign Policy article, “Soccer Still Has Some Explaining to Do,” the conversation revisits Franklin Foer’s influential How Soccer Explains the World and tests its arguments against two decades of change—from the rise of global club brands and commercial tours to the persistence (and reinvention) of local identities, fan cultures and political tensions.

    The episode moves well beyond surface-level takes, tackling contradictions at the heart of modern football: hyper-global markets dressed up as “authentic” tradition, the uneasy coexistence of strict rules on the pitch with moral ambiguity off it and the geopolitical realities shaping everything from World Cups to player migration. With case studies ranging from Morocco’s World Cup ambitions to diaspora identities and the politics of fandom, this is a rigorous, accessible exploration of how football both reflects and distorts the forces shaping the modern world.

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    39 mins
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