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Athletics Integrity Unit

Coordinates:43°43′57″N7°25′29″E / 43.73250°N 7.42472°E /43.73250; 7.42472
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anti-doping agency for the sport of athletics
Athletics Integrity Unit
AbbreviationAIU
FormationApril 2017; 8 years ago (2017-04)
PurposeAnti-doping in sport
HeadquartersMonaco
Coordinates43°43′57″N7°25′29″E / 43.73250°N 7.42472°E /43.73250; 7.42472
Head
Brett Clothier
AffiliationsWorld Athletics
Websitewww.athleticsintegrity.orgEdit this at Wikidata

TheAthletics Integrity Unit (AIU) is aMonaco-based organization founded byWorld Athletics in April 2017 to combatdoping and address other forms of ethical misconduct in thesport of athletics.[1][2] It operates independently from World Athletics to fulfill World Anti-Doping Code requirements.[3] It is currently headed by Brett Clothier.[4]

The organization collected more than 3800 samples from athletes in the first six months of 2021 in advance of the2020 Summer Olympics.[5] In 2023, AIU announced new efforts to establish a "blood steroid passport" to better detect the presence of steroids, more commonly used in sprinting and throwing events, throughblood serum and endocrine testing.[6]

AIU argues that the number of doping bans in athletics indicates that other sports are not robustly testing athletes.[7]

Testing and Disciplinary Process

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AIU conducts in-competition and out-of-competition blood and urine testing of athletes. Athletes in the Registered Testing Pool (RTP) must meet whereabouts requirements to facilitate random testing.[8] Athletes may be tested by AIU, theWorld Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), theInternational Olympic Committee, or national anti-doping organizations. AIU has cited a preference for testing by private labs over national organizations due to potential bias in favor of athletes. Use of substances on the WADA Prohibited List without aTherapeutic Use Exemption, abnormalities in theAthlete Biological Passport, whereabouts failures, test tampering, and other doping rules violations may result in disciplinary measures.[7][9]

The AIU disciplinary process includes provisional suspensions in force, pending first instance cases, and first instance decisions.[10] Charges are brought by the AIU before the international, 47-member Disciplinary Tribunal to issue a first instance decision.[11] These decisions may be appealed to theCourt of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) by the athlete, anti-doping agency, or World Athletics. Appeals to CAS by athletes have rarely been upheld and appeals by World Athletics are generally upheld. However, World Athletics' 2023 appeals to CAS arguing thatTobi Amusan andNorah Jeruto committed anti-doping violations were dismissed.[12][13][14] AIU maintains a list of individuals currently ineligible to participate in the sport of athletics.[15]

AIU categorizes national athletics federations into three groups based on doping risk and athlete success at the international level, with Category A reflecting the highest combined doping risk and success and Category C reflecting the lowest. Higher categories require stronger anti-doping measures from the national federations. As of 2025, Category A includes the national athletics federations of Belarus, Bahrain, Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria, Russia, and Ukraine. Category B has 57 national federations and Category C has 150.[16]

AIU may also sanction individuals for violations related to non-doping ethics violations. The only individuals currently banned by AIU for non-doping violations are twoAlbanian Athletics Federation officials who manipulated competition results.[17]

References

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  1. ^"AIU details comprehensive testing programme ahead of Tokyo Olympics | NEWS | World Athletics".worldathletics.org. Retrieved2024-06-15.
  2. ^Pavot, David; Faiss, Raphael (2023-03-15)."Where is the frontier between integrity in sport and anti-doping if it exists?".Frontiers in Sports and Active Living.5.doi:10.3389/fspor.2023.1158055.PMC 10050759.PMID 37008626.
  3. ^"Know Us | Athletics Integrity Unit".www.athleticsintegrity.org. Retrieved2024-06-15.
  4. ^"Brett Clothier appointed as first Head of Athletics Integrity Unit | PRESS-RELEASE | World Athletics".worldathletics.org. Retrieved2024-06-15.
  5. ^"AIU details comprehensive testing programme ahead of Tokyo Olympics | NEWS | World Athletics".worldathletics.org. Retrieved2024-06-15.
  6. ^Ingle, Sean (2023-08-22)."Head of Athletics Integrity Unit takes aim at doping policies of other sports".The Guardian.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved2024-06-15.
  7. ^abPanja, Tariq (2024-08-01)."Track Keeps Banning Drug Cheats. It Worries That Other Sports Are Not".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2024-08-15.
  8. ^"Whereabouts Requirements | Athletics Integrity Unit".www.athleticsintegrity.org. Retrieved2024-06-15.
  9. ^"Know The Process | Athletics Integrity Unit".www.athleticsintegrity.org. Retrieved2024-06-15.
  10. ^"Athletics Integrity Unit Disciplinary Process | Athletics Integrity Unit".www.athleticsintegrity.org. Retrieved2024-06-15.
  11. ^"Global List of Ineligible Persons | Athletics Integrity Unit".www.athleticsintegrity.org. Retrieved2024-06-15.
  12. ^"Pending Appeals | Athletics Integrity Unit".www.athleticsintegrity.org. Retrieved2024-06-15.
  13. ^"Appeal Decisions | Athletics Integrity Unit".www.athleticsintegrity.org. Retrieved2024-08-15.
  14. ^"Amusan's whereabouts case headed to CAS".ESPN.com. 2023-09-18. Retrieved2024-06-15.
  15. ^"Global List of Ineligible Persons | Athletics Integrity Unit".www.athleticsintegrity.org. Retrieved2024-06-15.
  16. ^"NATIONAL FEDERATION ANTI-DOPING OBLIGATIONS | Athletics Integrity Unit".www.athleticsintegrity.org. Retrieved2025-02-13.
  17. ^"Two officials banned over fake long jump results".ESPN.com. 2023-04-26. Retrieved2025-02-13.

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