soccer stadium

Statement by Dignity 2026 Coalition on the Announcement of the Match Schedule for the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup

This weekend, FIFA released the much-anticipated match schedule for the 2026 Men’s World Cup, which will be held across 16 cities in the United States, Mexico, and Canada. As planning accelerates in these host cities, event organizers will now be making critical decisions on tournament operations, including for Fan Fests, transportation, concessions, and hospitality. In the months ahead, FIFA, its business partners, and host cities must work collectively with civil society and other stakeholders to ensure a successful tournament – one that leaves an enduring, positive legacy not only for the North American hosts of FWC2026, but also future host cities and countries. Critical to that legacy is respecting the human rights and dignity of millions of World Cup stakeholders, from the fans to the athletes, to the residents of the host cities and the workers who make the tournament possible.

The Dignity 2026 coalition is looking to FIFA to demonstrate a commitment to the same human rights standards that it is demanding from host cities and their partners, including around the principles of transparency and accountability. We celebrated when, in 2018, the bid for hosting the 2026 tournament became the first time that FIFA included human rights criteria in the selection process for hosting the World Cup. We have also been encouraged by FIFA’s openness to engaging with Dignity 2026 to identify human rights risks and set benchmarks for improving standards, and we welcome the decision to award the final match to New York/New Jersey. Now, even as planning for 2026 advances, we are closely watching for FIFA to build on the human rights legacy in North America toward future Men’s and Women’s World Cups, especially those in the process of site selection for the 2030 and 2034 tournaments. In that spirit, we urge FIFA to make transparent its due diligence process for making key decisions, including the process of selecting host cities and countries and the extent to which human rights standards were explicitly considered. The due diligence processes for 2026 should be the floor, not the ceiling. 

Working together now and through 2026, FIFA, host cities, business partners, and civil society stakeholders have a timely and historic opportunity to adopt a proactive and collaborative approach for human and labor rights, including embedding human rights into business practices and robust stakeholder engagement. Dignity 2026 is committed to working with event organizers to mitigate the risk of abuses before they happen. If done right, we can guarantee an enduring human rights legacy for future mega-sporting events beyond 2026.

About Dignity 2026

Dignity 2026 is a diverse coalition of civil society organizations with a long history of advocating for strong human rights standards in both the World Cup and in the cities that will be hosting the 2026 tournament. We represent the labor movement, community and economic justice campaigns, civil rights groups, sports equity activists, migrant rights organizations, LGBTQ+ rights groups, soccer fans’ networks, and more. The Sport & Rights Alliance is a member of Dignity 2026 along with Athlete Ally, the Army of Survivors, Human Rights Watch, and others.

For press inquiries, please contact:

Lstrieb@aflcio.org

press@athleteally.org

WL46@law.georgetown.edu

Related news

Debunking the IOC FAQ

Debunking the IOC FAQ

In connection to the IOC Policy on the Protection of the Female (Women’s) Category in Olympic Sport A scientific, legal, and child safeguarding analysis from Humans of Sport May 2026 Introduction On 26 March 2026, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Executive Board adopted a new Policy on the Protection of the Female (Women’s) Category in […]

READ MORE

2026 World Cup: Tournament Will Kick Off in Climate of Fear

2026 World Cup: Tournament Will Kick Off in Climate of Fear

‘Reporters’ Guide’ Outlines ICE Threats, Press Freedom Risks, Unmet FIFA Commitments (Berlin) – The 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup is unfolding against a backdrop of abusive immigration enforcement in the United States, new threats to media freedom, discrimination, and unmet human rights commitments by FIFA and host cities, Human Rights Watch said today, releasing a “Reporters’ Guide” […]

READ MORE

Related resources

FIFA: New Rule Recognizes Afghan Women’s Team

FIFA: New Rule Recognizes Afghan Women’s Team

After Nearly Five Years in Exile, Women Can Seek World Cup Qualification (Vancouver, April 28, 2026) – The FIFA Council’s decision to approve amendments to its Governance Regulations provides a landmark opportunity to ensure gender equity and human rights in sport, the Sport & Rights Alliance said today. These changes allow for the official recognition […]

READ MORE

“This may be the most important story you will tell, and you want it done right”

“This may be the most important story you will tell, and you want it done right”

Workshop Recap: Media Training for Impacted Athletes: Sharing your story with journalists On September 24th, The Athletes Network for Safer Sports held its third workshop of the year focusing on “Media Training for Impacted Athletes.” Featuring top sports journalists with extensive experience covering abuse cases, Shireen Ahmed and Suzy Wrack, the session marked an important […]

READ MORE

Survey: Help Shape UNESCO’s Global Safe Sport Policy Standards

Survey: Help Shape UNESCO’s Global Safe Sport Policy Standards

Take the Survey to Help Guide Safe Sport Policies Across the Globe **This survey is now closed.** In collaboration with UNESCO’s Sport Section, the Sport & Rights Alliance is conducting a survey to gather the perspectives of impacted people on UNESCO’s Global Policy Standards for Inclusive, Equitable and Safe Sport and Physical Education. The purpose […]

READ MORE

Join the Network

Sport has the potential to be a catalyst for human development, unity, and freedom, but too often it instead brings harm to its athletes, fans, and communities. We exist to uncover and rectify the many abuses that exist both in and around sport. We aim to transform sports into an authentic force for good.