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INAS Global Games

Sports event for people with intellectual disabilities From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

INAS Global Games
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The INAS Global Games is a quadrennial global, international multi-sport event organised by the International Sports Federation for Persons with Intellectual Disability (INAS). First organised in 2004,[1] it is intended for elite competition in disability sports for athletes with intellectual disability and, since 2017, autism and Down syndrome.[2] It is the largest sporting event of its type. Athletes must have received classification from INAS to compete.[3]

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History

A precursor event was the World Games for Athletes with an Intellectual Disability held in 1989.[4] The competition was discontinued following the integration of athletes with intellectual disabilities into the Paralympics programme in 1996, though renewed exclusion following disability fabrication at the 2000 Summer Paralympics led to the relaunch as the INAS Global Games.[5] The first three INAS Global Games were hosted in Europe. The fourth edition in 2015 expanded to South America,[6] though INAS were forced to take over organisational duties due to the collapse of the local organising committee.[4] Australia won the hosting rights for the 2019 event, having led the medal rankings of the previous three.[7] Initially the competition was seen as a specialist event by other sports governing bodies, but the INAS athletics, swimming and table tennis competitions are now recognised and sanctioned by the main global bodies for those disability sports.[8]

The games is separate from the INAS World Championships, which are a series of sport-specific championships.

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Editions

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Number of athletes at the 2019 Global Games (highest to lowest)

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All-time medal table (2004 to 2023)

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Regional events

Virtus Americas Regional Games

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Virtus Oceania Asia Games

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Virtus European Games

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Sports

  •  Athletics (details) (2004 to present)
  •  Basketball (details) (2004 to present)
  •  Cricket (details) (demonstration sport in 2019)
  •  Cycling (details) (2009 to present)
  •  Futsal (details) (2004 to present)
  •  Judo (details) (2009)
  •  Rowing (details) (2009 to present)
  •  Swimming (details) (2004 to present)
  •  Table tennis (details) (2004 to present)
  •  Taekwondo (details) (demonstration sport in 2015)
  •  Tennis (details) (2004 to present)
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See also

Other INAS sporting championships

References

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