Premier League side Nottingham Forest FC,  The Weatherhead Center at Harvard University and the Lilian Thuram Foundation are hosting a landmark conference this week in the same-name UK city, aimed at combating racism and gender inequality in European football.
The conference, which is championed by Forest owner Evangelos Marinakis, is taking place at Nottingham Forest’s City Ground. It commenced on Tuesday and will conclude on Thursday.

The joint initiative between Nottingham Forest and The Weatherhead Center at Harvard University seeks to create a platform for in-depth debate on the challenges of racial and gender equity in the game. The three-day conference brings together experts, academics, sector leaders, current and former players as well as fans in order to focus on issues and to drive positive change in the sport.

Leading names in association football, including Lilian Thuram, Thierry Henry, Christian Karembeu, Robert Pires, Olivier Dacourt, Zé Maria, Viv Anderson and Stan Collymore, together with current Forest players, are meeting with the world’s leading academics from the renowned US higher education institution, wider academia and industry experts to forge new ideas and solutions over the two-day conference.

Noted academics and professionals in the women’s game will meet today, Wednesday, at the conference to discuss gender-based issues in the sport and to explore existing barriers to inclusivity for women and girls.

Key delegates include Bex Smith, a former New Zealand player and CEO of Crux Sports, Kat Craig, a sports human rights lawyer, Heidi Beha, Team Lead Development Programmes – Member Associations at FIFA, Ruma Bose, a best-selling author and an advisor and board member to a variety of global organizations, as well as Elisabet Spina, head of women’s football at AC Milan.

The aim of the conference is to deliver landmark agreements on new anti-racism and gender equality actions, which Nottingham Forest and the event’s delegates will present to the sport’s governing bodies and fellow European clubs.

Nottingham Forest owner Marinakis has a strong history of collaboration with Harvard. In 2016 Marinakis’ Greek club Olympiacos FC initiated the first event in their historic partnership, with an Olympiacos delegation attending the inaugural conference in Boston.

A year later, Olympiacos hosted Harvard for the second conference in Piraeus, Greece. That summit aimed to find solutions to widening accessibility to football across borders in a globalized world.

The outcome of the 2017 summit was a memorandum of understanding entitled ‘The Athens Principle on the Right to Participate in Sports’, signed by some of Europe’s leading clubs, including Barcelona, Real Madrid, Fenerbahce and Sporting Lisbon. The following year the collaboration returned to Boston to debate issues of participation, inclusion and social responsibility in global sports.

For the 2024 edition of the conference, delegates first convened at The City Ground in Nottingham on Tuesday, coinciding with the Premier League fixture between Nottingham Forest and Arsenal.

Today’s agenda has delegates broaching and discussing initiatives to fight racism in the game and to empower players and fans to take positive action. Former and current players, led by Lilian Thuram, will are set to convene for a workshop on athlete activism; finding solutions that empower players to utilize their voices and platforms to drive meaningful change.

The final session of today’s sessions involved delegates from Nottingham Forest’s prolific network of supporters groups to discuss fans’ role in challenging racism in the sport.

Nottingham Forest, The Weatherhead Center at Harvard University and The Lilian Thuram Foundation host a gala dinner at the city’s Council House on Tuesday. The dinner served as a chance for delegates to unite with politicians, business leaders and high-profile names from across the football world in the city of Nottingham and the wider region.

The second day of the conference today focuses on gender inequality in European football, evaluating the state of the women’s game across the continent and the challenges and solutions required to improve equality and inclusivity in the sport. Women’s supporter groups participated to share their views on what needs to be done to effect positive change from the fans’ perspective.

“I am delighted to welcome once again the academics from The Weatherhead Center at Harvard University and all those attending as we continue this important collaboration. I am particularly proud to welcome delegates to the wonderful city of Nottingham and to Nottingham Forest for this year’s conference,” Nottingham Forest owner Marinakis underlined, while adding:

“It is a sad reality that racism, prejudice and gender inequality continue to pervade our sport. This has no place in our game, nor in society. Our commitment to equality, diversity and inclusion has never been more important if we want to see the continued growth and success of European football and feel truly proud of the game we love.

“Our football clubs should be a reflection of the communities we serve and I believe football can lead the way in tackling wider societal problems. I am pleased that our current players have shown their eagerness to collaborate with the trailblazers who have gone before them, together with some of the world’s best academic minds and industry leaders to drive these vital conversations forward.

“Those who don’t believe in an equitable society for all – in sport and in all aspects of our everyday lives, irrespective of race, gender or ability – should fear obsolescence. It is them who will be left behind as we progress.

“To those involved in this week’s conference I say all power to you; harness your platform and your influence to create real and meaningful change for the sport we love, the societies we represent and the inclusive future we all wish to see.”

On his part, Thuram said: “The world of football does not realize the extent to which racism psychologically damages and destroys the people who are its victims. The proof is that those who are victims end up being afraid to denounce it.

“Let’s free the voices of the victims. We do not have to accept this harassment, and I am confident that this conference will make progress towards racial justice.”

The Guardian’s article on the event