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Journal ArticleDOI

Entertainment Made in Spain: Competition in the Bullfighting Industry

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TLDR
In this paper, the role of market forces and competition in the bullfighting industry, describing the peculiarities of its organization and looking at the many antic-competitive features that characterize it.
Abstract
Controversial for many reasons, bullfighting is probably one of the most typical entertainment activities in Spain. Bullfights are an idiosyncratic spectacle belonging to the Spanish cultural tradition, but which has also a meaningful economic significance. This paper will look at the role of market forces and competition in the bullfighting industry, describing the peculiarities of its organization and looking at the many anticompetitive features that characterize it. Spanish local authorities are strongly involved in the organization of bullfights and strict and detailed public rules govern the intervening actors and the performance during the shows. Thus, the institutional framework of bullfighting heavily constrains competition conditions in the industry, setting the scenario for a limited role of market forces. Furthermore, history shows that the collective organization of different players involved (promoters, breeders, bullfighters and subordinates) in order to exert their market power has occasionally lead to anticompetitive actions and reactions. Thus, unsurprisingly, the Spanish Competition authorities have dealt with some anticompetitive behaviour by some of the players participating in the bullfighting industry.

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Journal ArticleDOI

An evaluation of portuguese societal opinion towards the practice of bullfighting

TL;DR: It is concluded that there were still large pockets of individuals who desire to maintain the practice of traditional bullfighting within Portuguese society, despite recognition of animal suffering during the event.
Book ChapterDOI

Industry: The Importance of Catalonia

TL;DR: A third of industrial employment is in large companies (more than 250 employees), which represent only 0.4% of industrial companies, but which invoice 55.5% of sales.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Playing with the rules: Influences on the development of regulation in sport

TL;DR: In this article, a broad-sweep examination of the historical process of rule development in sport including an assessment of the influence over time of gambling, fair-play ideology, economic pressures, technological developments and legal intervention is presented.
Book

Death and Money in the Afternoon: A History of the Spanish Bullfight

TL;DR: Shubert as mentioned in this paper examines the evolution of Spanish culture and society through the prism of one of the West's first-and perhaps its most spectacular-spectator sports, and explores the bullfighters' world: their social and geographic origins, careers, and social status.
Journal ArticleDOI

Torophiles and Torophobes: The Politics of Bulls and Bullfights in Contemporary Spain

TL;DR: The bullfight as a public spectacle extends throughout southwestern Europe and much of Latin America, and it attains greatest political, cultural, and symbolic salience in Spain this paper. But within Spain today, the bullfight has come under serious attack, from at least three sources: (1) Catalan nationalists, (2) Spaniards who identify with the new Europe, and (3) increasingly vocal animal rights advocates.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Spanish bull-fight and kindred activities

TL;DR: In Espagne, le culte du taureau dans la culture populaire espagnole (fete locale celebrant le Saint de la ville) ou dans les combats de taureaux, (sacrifice rituel pour stabiliser la societe and longtemps associe a la religion), n'a pas disparu.
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